This paper provides a detailed analysis of the semantic structure of Anglo-Saxon verbs
of sound from the point of view of the Lexical Grammar Model (LGM). Firstly, a
description of the theoretical foundations of the LGM for the analysis of lexical
structures and the specific methodological principles developed for historical
vocabularies will be provided. Secondly, the semantic architecture of the verbal domain
of Old English sound predicates will be offered. Thirdly, the system of lexical
decomposition proposed by the LGM and its application to the lexical class under study
will be explained. This system has the format of a lexical template which will be
fundamental to understand the linking algorithm that mediates between the semantic
representation of sound predicates and their morpho-syntactic realizations. This linking
process has two phases: the first one will bind the lexical template of verbs of sound
with the representation of the constructions and alternations where these predicates
appear whereas the second interface will account for their grammatical behaviour