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STANDARDISATION AND WRITING. A Social History of English. Chapter 2 (page 32-57). The standardisation process. pag e 34. The nature of the writing system. 18 th Century: The spellings we used today were largely fixed [ Johnsson’s Dictionary of 1755 – spelling of words that
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STANDARDISATION AND WRITING A Social History of English Chapter 2 (page 32-57)
page 34 The nature of the writing system • 18th Century: The spellings we used today were largely fixed [Johnsson’s Dictionary of 1755 – spelling of words that influenced modern practice] • Start with the introduction of printing in the 1470 where it is too expensive for compositors to keep changing spellings. • 15th Century: Certain spellings owe their continued existence to the convenience of the printers ** In many personal hand-written documents, spelling continued to vary enormously long after the time of Caxton.
Although spelling may be fixed, pronunciation continues to vary and change – the relationship between sounds and spelling is indirect. • Different pronunciation might be due to:- • Different situation (formal or casual) • Amount of stressed placed upon it • Regional pronunciation/accent • Spelling often usefully separates homophones (two words that sound alike) – e.g. (meat and meet)
page 37 The scribal tradition • There are 2 different traditions in our spelling: - Germanic: spelt in the French way eg. F: /s/ in grace was written ce AS: grass (s retain) AS: cwic F: quick (qu spelling adopted) - Romance: borrowed their letters from the Greeks (the principle of alphabetic writing had spread from Middle East) eg. - th sound 1. they use their ingenuity 2. adapted the signs from runic alphabet (thϷ) • Thus, alphabetic writing has always been characterised by a process of adaptation
Variety of spoken English used in London. • Merchant-class • Lower-class • Standard English is based on the merchant-class dialect. East Midland South Eastern page 38
*Merchant-class Lower-class
page 39 ,
Middle of 15th century: the east midland dialect had been accepted as a written standard by those who wrote official documents • 16th century: standard variety was well-established in the domain of literature • - Before Shakespeare time – striking difference in language/dialect • - Shakespeare time – language variation disappeared page 40
National literary standard also had established-not only for literature, but for fixing the sense of linguistic norm. • Spoken standard was also raised (pronunciation) • The standard is set in London • - particularly at Court • - referring to the London-Oxford Cambridge triangle • End of 16th century – we have an accepted written standard and prestigious speech forms that were being promoted by the elite.
A standardized language has to developvariations to suit its wide range of functions. • Law • Government • Literature • Religion • Scholarship • Education • The new standard had to function in several domains previously associated with Latin & French: page 44
page 45 Law & Government • 1362 – Although English was used first time in law & government, French was still used in written documents & persisted about a century after. • 1731 – An Act was passed to limit the use of French & Latin in this domain. • Today, legal English still employs Law French & Law Latin phraseology. Example: fee simple & habeas corpus
page 45 Literature • English was felt to be ‘dull’ & ‘barbarous’, not suitable for literature; and it could not match the heights achieved by ancient Rome & Greece Writers. • 1580s – English achieved a state of eloquence page 46 Religion • 1611 – the publication of the Authorized Version of the Bible – a landmark in English history • The air of dignity & distancing of the language of the Bible, was not achieved by French or Latin models of prose, but by archaism (old word that are no longer used)
page 47 Scholarship • Increased use of English in writing of a scientific & scholarly nature – inspired by the example of AV • Due to the developing interest in science & philosophy –people wrote political pamphlets, journal, essays, 1st newspapers in English • End of 17th century – expression in prose had expanded to cover fictional writing. • Such wide functional range engendered self consciousness among English writers & enhanced the status of the language.
page 48 Education • 2 roles of language in education: - Languages that are taught - Languages that function as media of learning. • Latin: a taught language & medium of instruction in universities • French: become the latter role in schools • - Both were being challenged in the education system by English since 14th century. • Causes of changes: - The general reaction against French - The gradual loosening of the church’s hold on institutions of learning & literacy
The growth of secular education – increased the demand for learning in English • Protestant Reformation – promoted English as a medium for religious instruction. • The debate about the suitability of English led to massive translation of Latin into English • Standard variety became the medium of teaching.
Undertaken by small elite of scholars • It has to do with prescription; they argued to justify only one variant in preference to another • Codification involves 3 aspects: • Vocab • Grammar • Pronunciation page 49
page 50 Codification of Vocab • The most famous is the Dictionary by Dr. Samuel Johnson • He listed the range of meanings for each word including the commonest • Illustrated each strand of meaning with quotations • Johnson’s Dictionary could be viewed constituting the language itself.
page 51 Codification of Grammar • Started from the second half of 18th century • Certain grammatical forms & structures were judged as ‘correct’ while others were stigmatized as ‘vulgar’ • Grammars of Latin : - had been available for centuries - all scholars knew & use them - 18th century : Latin was usually found in written form – it was a fixed, regulated & invariant language
page 52 KNOWLEDGE OF ETYMOLOGY IN LATIN LANGUAGE - grammarians hated variation & change - where the meanings of words are concerned, ‘etymological fallacy’ was applied to justify certain constructions. EXAMPLE : - different fromwas preferable to different toor different than * dipart of the word originally means division or separateness
EXAMPLE : • - the most notorious example – pattern of negation in English • - English, since Anglo-Saxon signaled negation by the cumulative use of negative particles • I don’t know nothing – was a traditional English pattern • by the end of 18th century - condemned illogical by applying the principle that ‘two negatives make a positive’.
page 53 Codification of Pronunciation • Pronunciation is the most difficult aspect of language to codify. • 16th century: some scholars had already begun to consider the relationship between sounds & spelling. • HART = Argued that spelling should be aligned with pronunciation • MULCASTER = Rejected his idea because he claims that people pronounced differently • THOMAS ELYOT = No letter should be omitted in pronunciations. • Attempts to base pronunciations on spelling were not helped by the developments in the writing system. • Attempts to base pronunciations on spelling were not helped by the developments in the writing system.
The early printers used spellings that had nothing to do with sounds. Example : ue tongue sisland b debt page 53
Some spellings were to show where it originated DEBT – dette = Latin (debitum) • Nevertheless, the pronunciations are still left unaffected. • We are the ones left with the difficulty.
page 54 JOHNSON’S & WALKER’S DICTIONARY • At the end of the 18th century: levels of codification led to the production of the pronouncing dictionary. • JOHNSONS - This dictionary was much more easier and simple to understand because the spelling was fixed. • JOHN WALKER – A critical pronouncing dictionary (1791) • All letters in a word should be sounded. • However, certain pronunciations were too firmly entrenched in the upper-class society to be changed. • Some of the new spellings suited the pronunciation much better eg: cucumber - cowcumber
page 56 CODIFICATION & SOCIAL CLASS • In the early 19th century, codification was a weapon of class. • According to walker, it is increasingly clear that the lower-class pronunciations that must be avoided. • Codification of the standard wasn’t based on an informed & systematic analysis of language. • The most depressing results of codification is that it has tended to elevate personal taste and perspectives. • In the view of the social past, individual preference & understandings are not necessarily the same thing.