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Chapter 2 The sources of the English Vocabulary

Chapter 2 The sources of the English Vocabulary. The English people are of a mixed blood. At the beginning of the fifth century Britain was invaded by three tribes from the Northern Europe: the Angles, Saxons and Jutes. .

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Chapter 2 The sources of the English Vocabulary

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  1. Chapter 2 The sources of the English Vocabulary

  2. The English people are of a mixed blood. At the beginning of the fifth century Britain was invaded by three tribes from the Northern Europe: the Angles, Saxons and Jutes.

  3. These three tribes landed on the British coast, drove the Britons west and north and settled down on the island.

  4. These three three tribes merged into one people: the English people and the three dialects they spoke naturally grew into a single language: the English language.

  5. The world has nearly 3,000 languages, which can be grouped into roughly 300 language families on the basis of similarities in their basic word stock and grammar. The Indo-European is made up of most of the languages of Europe, the near East, and India.

  6. Indo-European Language Eastern Set Western Set

  7. Eastern Set Balto-Slavic Indo-Irannian Armenian Albanian

  8. Balto-Slavic Czech Russian Prussian Polish Slovenian Lithuanian Bulgarian

  9. Indo-Iranian Persian Bengali Hindi Romany Derived from Sanskrit

  10. Armenian Albanian Armenian Albanian

  11. Western Set Celtic Italic Germanic Hellenic

  12. Celtic Scottish Irish Welsh Breton

  13. Italic Italian Portuguese Spanish French Romanian

  14. Germanic German Dutch Flemish English Norwegian Icelandic Danish Swedish

  15. Hellenic Greek

  16. A Historical Overview of the English Vocabulary

  17. English can be roughly divided into: Old English, Middle English Modern English.

  18. Old English (450---1150) Middle English ( 1150---1500) Modern English (1500---Now) Early: 1500---1700 Late :1700--- present

  19. After the Romans, the Germanic tribes called angles, Saxons, and Jutes came. Soon they took permanent control of the land, which was to be called England. Their language, historically known as Anglo-Saxon, dominated and almost totally blotted out the Celtic.

  20. Celtic made only a small contribution to the English vocabulary with such words as crag and bin and some place names like Avon, Kent, London, Themes. Now people generally refer to Anglo-Saxon as old English.

  21. Two events in the Old English Period: in the 6th century:Latin speaking Roman missionaries came to spread Christianity in Britain. The introduction of Christianity had a great impact on the English vocabulary. It brought many new ideas and customs and also many religious terms: abbot, candle, altar, amen, apostle.

  22. In the 9th century: the land was invaded again by Norwegian and Danish Vikings. They came first to plunder, then to conquer. Finally they succeeded in placing a Danish king on the throne of England. With the invaders, many scandinavian words came into English.

  23. These new words did not identify new ideas and objects. They were everyday words for which the English had terms and expressions. Many words were exactly alike, such as father, husband, house, life, man,mother, summer and winter.Other words were so much alike that they were used interchangeably.

  24. It is estimated that at least 900 words of Scandinavian origin have survived in modern English, such as skirt, skill, window, leg, grasp, birth, they ,their, them and egg.

  25. Old English has a vocabulary of about 50,000 to 60,000 words. It was a highly inflected language just like modern German. Therefore, nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs ahs complex endings or vowel changes, or both.

  26. Middle English Old English began to undergo much change when the Normans invaded England from France in 1066.The Norman conquest started a continual flow of French words into English.

  27. The English were defeated, but not killed off, nor were they driven from their country. They were reduced to the status of an inferior people. Norman French became the polite speech.

  28. By the end of the 11th century, almost all of the people who held political or social power and many of those in powerful church positions were of Norman French origin.

  29. By the end of the 13th century, English gradually came back into the schools, the law courts, and government and regained social status thanks to Wycliff translation of the Bible and the writings of Chaucer.

  30. Between 1250 and 1500 about 9,000 words of French origin poured into English. We can find words relating to every aspect of human society, e.g. Government, social scales, law, religion, moral matters, military affairs, food ,fashion, etc.

  31. For example: state, power, prince, duke, judge, court, crime, angel, mercy, peace, battle, pork, bacon, fry, roast, dress, coat.

  32. Middle English retained much fewer inflections. Endings of nouns and adjectives marking distinction of number, came and often of gender lost their distinctive forms. If we say old English was a language of full endings, Middle English was one of levelled endings.

  33. Modern English began with the establishment of printing in England. In the early period of Modern English, Europe saw a new upsurge of learning ancient Greek and Roman classics. This is known in history as the Renaissance.

  34. Latin and Greek were recognized as the languages of the Western world’s great literary heritage and of great scholarship, but translators were rapidly making great literary works available in English.

  35. Translators and scholars borrowed heavily from the Latin vocabulary of their source materials during this period and many Latin words became part of English vocabulary.

  36. In the mid-seventeenth century, England experienced Bourgeois Revolution followed by the Industrial Revolution and rose to be a great economic power. With the growth of colonization. British tentacles began stretching out to every corner of the globe.

  37. Since the beginning of the last century, esp, after World War II, the world has seen breathtaking advances in science and technology. Many new words have been created to express new ideas, etc. ,yet more words are created by means of word-formation.

  38. In modern English, word endings were mostly lost with just a few exceptions. English has evolved from a synthetic language to the present analytic language.

  39. Classification of words: English words may fall into the basic word stock and non-basic vocabulary by use frequency, into content words and functional words by notion and into native words and borrowed words by origin.

  40. Basic Word Stock: All national character: Words of the basic word stock denote the most common things and phenomena of the world around us, which are indispensable to all the people who speak the language.

  41. Stability: As they denote the commonest things necessary to life, they are likely to remain unchanged. Stability, however, is only relative.

  42. Productivity: Words of the basic word stock are most root words or monosyllabic words; They can form new words with other roots and affixes

  43. Waterline waterhead waterfall waterfront waterlocks waterman waterside waterskin waterway waterproof water-sic water-ski watermanship watered-down watercart water-rate water-police water-fast 见:23页

  44. Footage, football, footpath, footer, footfall, footed, footloose, footling, footman, footing, footprint

  45. doglike, doghood, dogcart, dog- cheap, dog-ear, dog-fall, dogfight, doghole, dog-paddle, dogsleep

  46. Polysemy: Words belonging to the basic word stock often possess more than one meaning because most of them have undergone semantic changes in the course of use and become polysemous.见21页

  47. Collocability: Many words of the basic word stock have strong collocability: 见22页

  48. A change of heart, after one’s heart, cry one’s heart out, eat one’s heart out, a heart of gold,

  49. at heart, break one’s heart, cross one’s heart, have one’s heart in one’s mouth, heart and hand,

  50. heart and soul, take sth to heart, wear one’s heart upon one’s sleeve, with all one’s heart.

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