CHAPTER
I
INTRODUCTION
1.1. Background
Of Study
The
history of the language can be traced back to the arrival of three Germanic
tribes to the British Isles during the 5th Century AD. Angles, Saxons and Jutes
crossed the North Sea from what is the present day Denmark and northern
Germany. The inhabitants of Britain previously spoke a Celtic language. This
was quickly displaced. Most of the Celtic speakers were pushed into Wales,
Cornwall and Scotland. One group migrated to the Brittany Coast of France where
their descendants still speak the Celtic Language of Breton today. The Angles
were named from Engle, their land of origin. Their language was called Englisc
from which the word, English derives.
1.2. The Purpose
of Study
Within
this paper, we will learn about the
history of language, how language change, why language
changes and the Sub-field of historical linguistics study, such as Comparative linguistics, Etymology, Dialectology, Phonology, Morphology
and syntax.
CHAPTER II
DISCUSSION
2.1.The history of English
Traditionally
and in fact most appropriately, the history of English is divided into four
distinct periods: Old, Middle and Modern English.
Ø Old English
The invaders
dominated the original Celtic-speaking inhabitants, whose languages survived
largely in Scotland, Wales, and Cornwall. The dialects spoken by the invaders
formed what is now called Old English. Later, it was strongly influenced by the
North Germanic language Norse, spoken by the Vikings who settled mainly in the
north-east. The new and the earlier settlers spoke languages from different
branches of the Germanic family; many of their lexical roots were the same or
similar, although their grammars were more distant, including the prefixes,
suffixes and inflections of many of their words.
CONCLUSION
Traditionally
and in fact most appropriately, the history of English is divided into four
distinct periods: Old, Middle, Early Modern and Modern English. Old English
covers a period from the second half of the first millennium to roughly around
1100, ending shortly after the Norman Conquest. It is a period in which English
still was a dominantly synthetic language and it is certainly different from
any English spoken since. The language of this period was influenced by and in
contact (language contact) with Latin and what is called Old Norse, i.e. the
language of Scandinavian seafarers and settlers. As in later stages, English
lexicon at this stage of its development was (amongst other features)
characterized by frequent borrowings from contact languages, i.e. by taking
over words from them. With the beginning of the
REFERENCES
Bragg,
Melvyn. 2003. The Adventure of English: The Biography of a Language.
New
York: Arcade Publishing.
Bryson,
Bill. 1990. Mother Tongue: English and How it Got That Way. New
York:
Perennial.
McCrum,
Robert, William Cran, and Robert MacNeil. 1986. The Story of
English.
New York: Viking.
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