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History of the English Language
Category:
Otro
Actualizado:
21 jun 2023
0
0
147
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Created by
Anika
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Celtic Speaking Tribes: The Celtic-speaking tribes were the original inhabitants of the British Isles before the arrival of Romans. Many dialect existed among the Celtics as they didn't live within defined borders. It was nearly impossible to communicate between people with different dialects. E.g. River names: 'Thames' 'Don', 'Esk', 'Wye' 'tor' = 'hill', 'pen' = 'top', 'crag' = rock
The Romans: The Romans did not seek to impose their language, at least by force. In the years immediately after the invasion, many of the more ambitious native Britons chose to learn Latin in order to conduct business with the Romans. As time passed, many Britons would have grown up in Latin-speaking households, or would have been bilingual to some extent. E.g. 'planta' = 'plant', 'win' = 'wine' 'forca' = 'fork', 'straet' = 'road'
The Angles, Saxons and Jutes: Missionaries travelled around the country converting communities from their pagan rituals to Christian beliefs. The Angles, Saxon and Jutes, more commonly known as the Anglo-Saxons, came from Denmark, northern Germany and northern Holland. Their branch of the language tree was one of three collectively called Germanic: • North Germanic – Icelandic, Faeroese, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish • East Germanic – Gothic • West Germanic – English, Frisian, Flemish, Dutch, Germa
The Vikings - Norsemen and Danes: These invaders from Sweden, Norway & Denmark, collectively known as ‘Vikings’ , ‘Norsemen’ or ‘Danes’ brought with them their own language – ‘Old Norse’ – which was also Germanic. After a series of battles with the English armies, the Viking invaders settled in the north and east of England, a region that would later become known as ‘Danelaw’. Over time, as trade increased and inter-marriage occurred, Old English speaking communities began to absorb Norse words
The Normans: The Normans were descendants of Norsemen who hadbeen granted land in northern France. They no longer spoke a Germanic tongue but a dialect of Old French. England became in effect a trilingual country: The upper classes spoke and wrote a form of Norman French. The lower classes continued to speak forms of Old English. The law, the church, and affairs of state were conducted in French and Latin. The blending of Norman French with Old English greatly increased the store of vocabulary
Geoffrey Chaucer: By the end of the fourteenth century, as Norman political power diminished in both England and France, Englishonce again became the dominant language in Britain, although it consisted of a number of different dialects. Two significant factors assisted this: • The popularity of works by Geoffrey Chaucer, who wrote in the London dialect. • The invention of the printing press in 1440 by Johannes Guttenberg and its subsequent use in England by William Caxton (1422–91), who publi
The Great Vowel Shift: The transition from ‘Middle English’ to ‘Early Modern English’ is associated in part with what is known as ‘the Great Vowel Shift’. Not only did this shift change how long vowels were articulated and how they sounded, but also the way in which words containing them were written, which affected their spelling. These changes would form the basis of ‘Modern English’
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