Mercian was spoken in the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Mercia. Together with Northumbrian, it was one of the two Anglian dialects. The other two dialects of Old English were Kentish and West Saxon.
[edit] Historical originsThe dialect was spoken as far east as to border East Anglia and as far west as Wales. It was spoken as far north as Staffordshire, bordering Northumbria and Strathclyde; and as far south as South Oxfordshire/ Gloucestershire, where it bordered Essex and Wessex. Language from the Northumbrian dialect, which has strong Viking influence, also filtered in on a few occasions. [edit] AlphabetThe letters b, d, g, l, m, n, p, q, s, t, v, w, and z behave like Modern English.
Mercian also uses the eth (Ð and ð) and thorn (Þ and þ) both give the English 'th' sound as in 'thin' [edit] GrammarMercian grammar is very dense and often complex. [edit] NounsNouns have three genders: masculine, feminine, neuter; and four cases: nominative, accusative, dative and genitive. These, in addition, all have singular and plural forms. Mercian nouns can be strong or weak. [edit] Examples
[edit] PronounsPossessive pronouns (I/me, you,he,she, we, you (pl.) and they) come in all the above cases and come in three numbers: singular, dual ('you/we two'), plural. Demonstrative pronouns vary in the same way described below for the indefinite article, based on 'ðes' only for this. That and Those are the same as the definite article. Relative pronouns (who, which, that) are usually 'ðe' and 'ðet.' [edit] ArticlesThe definite article is equally complex, with all genders changing in the singular in all cases, based on variations of 'ðe.' In the plural all genders take the same word. The indefinite article was often omitted in Mercian. [edit] AdjectivesAdjectives are always declined, even with some verbs (which means they double up as adverbs sometimes), e.g. I am cold. Split into weak and strong declensions (depending on the strength of the noun), these were once again split into all four cases, both singular and plural. Comparative adjectives (e.g. bigger) always add 're.' Example: Æðelen (noble), æðelenre (nobler). [edit] VerbsVerbs can be conjugated from the infinitive into the present tense, the past singular, the past plural and the past participle. There exist strong and weak verbs in Mercian that too conjugate in their own ways. The future tense requires an auxiliary verb, like will (Mercian 'wyllen'). There are three moods: indicative, subjunctive and imperative. Like most inflected languages, Mercian has irregular verbs (such as 'to be' bēon and 'have' habben). [edit] VocabularyMercian vocabulary is based on Anglo-Celtic influences[citation needed], plus a few imports from Northumbrian. For further information, see References. [edit] References
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