History of English Language
History of English Language
History of English Language
Germanic invaders entered Britain on the east and south coasts in the 5th century.
The history of the English language really started with the arrival of three
Germanic tribes who invaded Britain during the 5th century AD. These tribes,
the Angles, the Saxons and the Jutes, crossed the North Sea from what
today is Denmark and northern Germany. At that time the inhabitants of
Britain spoke a Celtic language. But most of the Celtic speakers were pushed
west and north by the invaders—mainly into what is now Wales, Scotland
and Ireland. The Angles came from Englaland and their language was called
Englisc—from which the words England and English are derived.
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BC 55 Roman invasion of Britain by Julius Caesar.
Roman invasion and occupation. Beginning of
BC 43 Local
Roman rule of Britain.
inhabitants
436 Roman withdrawal from Britain complete.
Settlement of Britain by Germanic invaders speak Celtic
449
begins
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Middle English (1100-1500)
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Earliest surviving manuscripts in Middle
C1150
English.
English replaces Latin as the language of
1348
instruction in most schools.
English replaces French as the language of Middle English
1362 law. English is used in Parliament for the first
time.
c1388 Chaucer starts writing The Canterbury Tales.
c1400 The Great Vowel Shift begins.
Modern English
Hamlet's famous "To be, or not to be" lines, written in Early Modern English by Shakespeare.
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in print. Books became cheaper and more people learned to read. Printing
also brought standardization to English. Spelling and grammar became fixed,
and the dialect of London, where most publishing houses were, became the
standard. In 1604 the first English dictionary was published.
The main difference between Early Modern English and Late Modern English
is vocabulary. Late Modern English has many more words, arising from two
principal factors: firstly, the Industrial Revolution and technology created a
need for new words; secondly, the British Empire at its height covered one
quarter of the earth's surface, and the English language adopted foreign
words from many countries.
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Webster publishes his American English
1828
dictionary. Late Modern
The British Broadcasting Corporation is
1922 English
founded.
1928 The Oxford English Dictionary is published.
Varieties of English
From around 1600, the English colonization of North America resulted in the
creation of a distinct American variety of English. Some English
pronunciations and words "froze" when they reached America. In some ways,
American English is more like the English of Shakespeare than modern
British English is. Some expressions that the British call "Americanisms" are
in fact original British expressions that were preserved in the colonies while
lost for a time in Britain (for example trash for rubbish, loan as a verb
instead of lend, and fall for autumn; another example, frame-up, was re-
imported into Britain through Hollywood gangster movies). Spanish also had
an influence on American English (and subsequently British English), with
words like canyon, ranch, stampede and vigilante being examples of Spanish
words that entered English through the settlement of the American West.
French words (through Louisiana) and West African words (through the slave
trade) also influenced American English (and so, to an extent, British
English).
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The Germanic Family of Languages