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Page 1: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

A Brief History of the English Language,

or Why English is Hard to Spell!

Page 2: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

“Come, let us go down and confuse their language so

they will not understand each other.“

Genesis 11:7 (NIV)

Page 3: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

How did English get to England?

Page 4: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

How did English get to North America?

English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In

the early 1600’s

Page 5: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English is a member of the

● West Germanic group of the ● Germanic subfamily of the ● Indo-European family of languages.

Whew!

Page 6: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Think of it as the Family Tree of the Language!

➢One of the leaves is the language, English.

➢The branch it has come from is West Germanic, which grows out of

➢Germanic, which comes from the roots of

➢The Indo-European family of languages.

Page 7: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English is the official language of how many nations.

about

?

Page 8: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English is the official language of how many nations?

about

45

Page 9: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English is spoken by how many people?

more than

?

Page 10: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English is spoken by how many people?

more than

450 million

Page 11: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English is one of the two working languages of the United Nations. The other one is _____.

?

Page 12: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English is one of the two working languages of the United Nations. The other one is

French!

Page 13: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English is the mother tongue of the British Isles.

Page 14: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English spread because of

➢ British exploration, colonization, and empire building during the ● Seventeenth ● Eighteenth ● And Ninteenth centuries

Page 15: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

The history of the English Language

parallels the history of the English people and the British Islands.

Page 16: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

In the middle of the fifth century

• Tribes of Germanic invaders -- Angles, Saxons, and Jutes -- brought their languages across the English Channel to the British Isles.

Page 17: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

In the sixth century

• Christian missionaries arrived in England and brought Latin with them.

• Other invaders from Scandinavia established settlements in Britain.

Page 18: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

By the ninth century

• Anglo-Saxon (a dialect spoken in Southern England) had become standard English.

Page 19: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Today,

• One fifth of the English words we use derive from this Anglo-Saxon English.

Anglo-Saxon

Page 20: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

But in the eleventh century

• The Norman Conquest of Britain brought foreign rulers whose native language was –French.

Page 21: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

For more than three hundred years,

• French was the official language of England.

• French was the language of the court.

• English was spoken only by peasants.

• For example, consider the words “pig” and “pork.”

Page 22: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Another half of our English vocabulary is

• of French and Romance origins.

French/Romance

OtherAnglo-Saxon

•No, not that kind!

Page 23: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

In the fourteenth century,• English/Wessex again became the language

of the English upper class.• The new standard was a London dialect

since London was now the capital city.• During the three hundred years kings of

England had spoken French, the English language had changed greatly.

• The French spoken by nobles became more like English. The English of the common people was now full of French words.

Page 24: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

There are three periods of English:

1. Old English or Anglo-Saxon to c. 1150.2. Middle English to c. 1500.3. Modern English to today.

❖ An Englishman of 1300 wouldn’t have understood the English of 500; nor would he understand the English we speak today.

Page 25: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Here’s an example of changes in English pronunciation:

• The word name • In Old English was pronounced nämä (the a as in fäther)• In Middle English was pronounced näme (fäther) + (sofa)In Modern English, is pronounced

nām

Page 26: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Vocabulary Sources of the English LanguageWords come from all over!

Page 27: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

From Anglo-Saxon English

bread, good, shower, home, stones, fox

Page 28: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

From Latin Christianity

priest, bishop, anthem, candle, epistle, hymn

Page 29: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

From Scandinavian Settlers

Husband, sky, skin, club, gape, root, egg, take, give, window,

leg, skin, crawl, die, sister

Page 30: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

From Norman French and Vulgar Latin

Legal terms: judge, jury, tort, attorney, crime, assault

Terms of rank: prince, duke, baron, parliament,

countess Others: honor, courage, season, manner, study,

castle. . .

Page 31: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

From Latin and Greek during the Renaissance and after

Words for science, invention, and

technology: conifer, cyclamen, helium,

halogen, intravenous, isotope, metronome, polymer, telephone

Page 32: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Word Parts from Greek and Latin

! Prefixes: (“Pre” from Latin means earlier or before) “bi-” from Latin means _____ “extra” from Latin means _________ “fore” from Old English means _____ “il” from _______ means ______ “mis” from Latin means ________ “pre” and “post” mean ___________

Page 33: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Word Parts from Greek and Latin! Suffixes: ( from Latin for “to fasten beneath”) For example: “-ment” from Latin is a word part that

indicates product, means, action, or state.

We often use “-ment” to turn a verb into a noun: Excitement is the state of being excited. Encouragement is the action of encouraging. Discouragement is the product of being

discouraged.

Page 34: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Want to know lots more words?

! One of the best ways to increase your vocabulary is to learn word parts (prefixes, suffixes, and roots) that are often used in English.

! “bio” (life) + “logy” (study of) = biology which is the study of life What about geology, hydrology, psychology?

Page 35: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Words from everywhere over the past three hundred years

tobacco, banana, pajamas, squash, raccoon, prairie,

chowder, canyon, ranch, chop suey,

kudzu, pretzel, kindergarten, bagel,

pizza coleslaw, bedspread, tomato,

jazz, yams

Page 36: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

The origins of a word is called its Etymology

Use a good dictionary to find out where the words you use

come from.

Page 37: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Part 2: The Etymology of a Few Words

Page 38: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

tobaccoTell that to someone in the hospital with lung cancer from smoking cigarettes! Then again, perhaps that’s why people have such a hard time quitting once they start smoking.

The word “tobacco” comes from the Arabic for “euphoria-causing herb.”

Euphoria (from the Greek) means a feeling of happiness or well-being.

Page 39: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

pajamas

This comes from Hindi from a Persian word for “leg or foot” combined with another for “garment.”

Page 40: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

bananaThis word comes through Portuguese and Spanish from a native West African name.

Page 41: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

squashThis comes from a Native American word.Can you wrap your tongue around this word?“askootasquash”

Page 42: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

I looked up the Etymology of the word “like” as in “I sure like

chocolate!”I found out it comes from the Old English word “lician,” which

means “to please, to be sufficient.”

Page 43: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

English is hard to spell, but it is a wonderful, versatile, expanding

language!

Page 44: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

Look for more barrowed words from other

countries; from the Philippines

Page 45: A Brief History of the English Language, - Scribe · How did English get to North America? English immigrants to Jamestown, Plymouth,. . . In the early 1600’s

I can do all things things through Christ who

strengthens me.

(Philippians 4:13)