Abstract :
In this article, I relate the loss of weorðan in the past tense to the loss of an Old English
grammatical subsystem that encouraged the expression of narrative by bounded sentence
constructions. This type of construction represents a situation as reaching its goal or
endpoint, and serves to mark progress in a narrative (e.g. then he walked over to the other
side). Instead of this system, from Middle English onwards a mixed system emerges with
differently structured bounded sentence constructions as well as, increasingly, unbounded
sentence constructions – which structure events as open-ended, usually by means of a
progressive form (e.g. he was walking). I show how weorðan in Old English was strongly
associated with theOld English system of bounded sentence constructions – an association
with boundedness is not surprising given its meaning of ‘(sudden) transition into another
state’. In the thirteenth century this rigid Old English system started to break down,
as primarily evidenced by the disappearance of the time adverbial þa and the loss of
verb-second. Wearð, being strongly associated with the old way of structuring narrative,
decreased too and eventually disappeared.