A Brief History of The English Language: Old English To Modern English
A Brief History of The English Language: Old English To Modern English
A Brief History of The English Language: Old English To Modern English
English Language
Old English to Modern English
Before English
The various dialects spoken by the Germanic
tribes are known as Pre-Old English. The
term England developed later from the tribal
name Angles, possibly because this kingdom
was dominant. The term Anglo-Saxon referred
to the West Germanic tribes generally. Old
English was not entirely uniform and four
main dialects were predominant:
Northumbrian, Mercian, West Saxon, and
Kentish. Nearly all of Old English literature is
preserved in the West Saxon dialect.
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An Overview
Periods in History of English
Old English: 449-1066
Middle English: 1100-1500
Modern English: 1500 on
Beowulf
Old English, whose
best known surviving
example is the poem
Beowulf, lasted until
about 1100, just after
the most important
event in the
development and
history of the English
languagethe Norman
Conquest in 1066.
Tales of Canterbury
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And palmers to go
seeking
out strange
strands,
To distant shrines well
known
in sundry
lands.
And specially from every
shire's end
Of England they to
Canterbury wend,
The holy blessed martyr
there to seek
Who helped them when
they lay so ill.
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Shakespeare
Shakespeare wrote in
modern English.
Elizabethan English has
much more in common
with our language today
than it does with the
language of Chaucer. Many
familiar words and phrases
were coined or first
recorded by Shakespeare.
Some 2,000 words and
countless idioms are his.
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Shakespeare
Newcomers to Shakespeare
are often shocked at the
number of clichs contained
in his plays, until they
realize that he coined them
and they became clichs
afterwards. "One fell
swoop," "vanish into thin
air," and "flesh and blood"
are all Shakespeare's.
Words he bequeathed to the
language include "critical,"
"leapfrog," "majestic,"
"dwindle," and "pedant."
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Standardization
The printing press brought standardization to
English. The dialect of London, where most
publishing houses were located, became the
standard.
Spelling and grammar became fixed.
The first English dictionary was published in 1604
(Cawdreys A Table Alphabeticall).
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Standard English
Many find the term standard English to
be inaccurate and misleading because
it creates a false impression that there
exists a single variety of English that
all educated Americans speak and
write.
Edited written English
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English Vocabulary
There are 600,000 words in the
English language.
The average college student may
have a vocabulary of 80,000.
Nearly 60% of all he or she says is
said with just 100 different words.
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