When English Was First Spoken:-
English taken from Proto-Indo-European language spoken by nomadic people circling Europe about 5000 years ago This language also came from German. English is traditionally divided into three major historical periods: Old English, Middle English and Modern English. Old English was brought to the British Isles by the Germanic people: Jute, Saxon and Angles, starting in 449, with the establishment of learning centers in Winchester, the history was being written, and translations of important Latin texts in the West Saxon dialect . 800, the spoken bid became the official "Old English" The word adopted came from Scandinavian languages.
Development of English language:-
In the Norman Conquest in 1066, the Norman French dialect (which was a Germanic influence French) reached Britain. The learning center gradually moved from Winchester to London, so old English no longer dominate. Norman French is spoken by the elite, and Old English is spoken by ordinary people, it has been in the middle of time to become Middle English. By the 1200s, about 10,000 French words were included in English. Some words were served as substitutions for English words, and some coexisted with slightly changed meanings. Spelling changed as people with Norman-French background wrote the English words as they had heard. Other changes include loss of sex for nouns, some words form (called inflection), silence "e," and correlation of more constrained word order. Chaucer wrote in English in the mid-1300s. At that time, Latin (churches, courts), French and English were widely used in the UK, although there were still many regional dialects in English that caused much confusion.
There were structural and grammatical changes too. Charles Barber explains in "The English Language: A Historical Introduction":
"A major syntactic change in English language from Anglo-Saxon's time, [ubject] -O [bject] -V [erb] and V [erb] -S [ubject] -O [bject] type of word-order, and S [ubject] -V [erb] -O [bject] is normal. The type of SOV disappeared in the early Middle Ages, and the VSO type was rare after the middle.In the seventeenth century, the VS word-order is actually Is still present in English as a less common version, as in 'Downstairs children's poo Mr. crowd, "but full Viso type rarely happens today."
Modern English Use:-
Many scholars consider the early modern English period about 1500. During the Renaissance, English included many words from Latin to French, Classical Latin (not only Latin of Church) and Greek. The works of King James Bible (1611) and William Shakespeare are considered in modern English.
A major development took place in the language that ended the "Beginning" proportion of modern English period, when the pronunciation of long vowels changed. It is called the Great Wawl Shift and it is believed that it happened from 1700 or later after the 1400s. For example, as a Middle English long high tone eventually turned into a modern English long i, and a Middle English long oo developed in a modern English sound. Changed in the middle and lower vowels as well, such that for a modern English ah eh sound is changing in a long e and long sound.
So to clarify, the word "modern" means more than its pronunciation, grammar and pausing relative to spelling, with nothing to its current term or slang, which is always changing.
Today's English:-
In accordance with "Global Language in English Language" by David Crystal, English is sometimes adopting new words from other languages (350 languages). About three-fourths of these words come from Greek and Latin, but, as Ammon Shia points out in "Bad English: A History of Linguistic Aggression", "This is certainly not a Romance language, it is a Germanic The proof of this can be found in the fact that it is very easy to make a sentence without the words of Latin origin, but it is very impossible in which there is no word from Old English. "
With many sources behind its development, English is malleable, words are being invented regularly as well. Robert Birchfield, "The English Language", is called "a fleet of Jugaudu trucks, without any care. No form of linguistic engineering and no amount of linguistic legislation will prevent the myths of change which lie ahead . "
Amendment in dictionary:-
After using a certain quantity, dictionary editors decide whether there is enough power to add to the dictionary in a new word. Merriam-Webster notes that his editors spend a day or two hours reading material, looking for new words, spending old words, new forms, new spellings, and so on. Words are logged in their database for documentation and further analysis for further analysis. Before being added to a dictionary, there should be extensive use of publications and / or media in a wide variety of publications (not widespread usage, not jargon) to replace a new word or an existing word. The Oxford English Dictionary has a similar process for its 250 lexographers and editors, who are continuously researching and updating information on language.
English taken from Proto-Indo-European language spoken by nomadic people circling Europe about 5000 years ago This language also came from German. English is traditionally divided into three major historical periods: Old English, Middle English and Modern English. Old English was brought to the British Isles by the Germanic people: Jute, Saxon and Angles, starting in 449, with the establishment of learning centers in Winchester, the history was being written, and translations of important Latin texts in the West Saxon dialect . 800, the spoken bid became the official "Old English" The word adopted came from Scandinavian languages.
Development of English language:-
In the Norman Conquest in 1066, the Norman French dialect (which was a Germanic influence French) reached Britain. The learning center gradually moved from Winchester to London, so old English no longer dominate. Norman French is spoken by the elite, and Old English is spoken by ordinary people, it has been in the middle of time to become Middle English. By the 1200s, about 10,000 French words were included in English. Some words were served as substitutions for English words, and some coexisted with slightly changed meanings. Spelling changed as people with Norman-French background wrote the English words as they had heard. Other changes include loss of sex for nouns, some words form (called inflection), silence "e," and correlation of more constrained word order. Chaucer wrote in English in the mid-1300s. At that time, Latin (churches, courts), French and English were widely used in the UK, although there were still many regional dialects in English that caused much confusion.
There were structural and grammatical changes too. Charles Barber explains in "The English Language: A Historical Introduction":
"A major syntactic change in English language from Anglo-Saxon's time, [ubject] -O [bject] -V [erb] and V [erb] -S [ubject] -O [bject] type of word-order, and S [ubject] -V [erb] -O [bject] is normal. The type of SOV disappeared in the early Middle Ages, and the VSO type was rare after the middle.In the seventeenth century, the VS word-order is actually Is still present in English as a less common version, as in 'Downstairs children's poo Mr. crowd, "but full Viso type rarely happens today."
Modern English Use:-
Many scholars consider the early modern English period about 1500. During the Renaissance, English included many words from Latin to French, Classical Latin (not only Latin of Church) and Greek. The works of King James Bible (1611) and William Shakespeare are considered in modern English.
A major development took place in the language that ended the "Beginning" proportion of modern English period, when the pronunciation of long vowels changed. It is called the Great Wawl Shift and it is believed that it happened from 1700 or later after the 1400s. For example, as a Middle English long high tone eventually turned into a modern English long i, and a Middle English long oo developed in a modern English sound. Changed in the middle and lower vowels as well, such that for a modern English ah eh sound is changing in a long e and long sound.
So to clarify, the word "modern" means more than its pronunciation, grammar and pausing relative to spelling, with nothing to its current term or slang, which is always changing.
Today's English:-
In accordance with "Global Language in English Language" by David Crystal, English is sometimes adopting new words from other languages (350 languages). About three-fourths of these words come from Greek and Latin, but, as Ammon Shia points out in "Bad English: A History of Linguistic Aggression", "This is certainly not a Romance language, it is a Germanic The proof of this can be found in the fact that it is very easy to make a sentence without the words of Latin origin, but it is very impossible in which there is no word from Old English. "
With many sources behind its development, English is malleable, words are being invented regularly as well. Robert Birchfield, "The English Language", is called "a fleet of Jugaudu trucks, without any care. No form of linguistic engineering and no amount of linguistic legislation will prevent the myths of change which lie ahead . "
Amendment in dictionary:-
After using a certain quantity, dictionary editors decide whether there is enough power to add to the dictionary in a new word. Merriam-Webster notes that his editors spend a day or two hours reading material, looking for new words, spending old words, new forms, new spellings, and so on. Words are logged in their database for documentation and further analysis for further analysis. Before being added to a dictionary, there should be extensive use of publications and / or media in a wide variety of publications (not widespread usage, not jargon) to replace a new word or an existing word. The Oxford English Dictionary has a similar process for its 250 lexographers and editors, who are continuously researching and updating information on language.
No comments:
Post a Comment