THE HISTORY OF ENGLISH--Historical Background of British and American English.doc
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1、THE HISTORY OF ENGLISHHistorical Background of British and American EnglishThe history of the English language is divided into three periods: The period from 450 to 1150 is known as the Old English. It is described as the period of full inflections, since during most of this period the case ending o
2、f the noun, the adjective and the conjugation of the verb were not weakened. Old English was a highly inflected language. It had a complete system of declensions with four case and conjugations. So Old English grammar differs from Modern English grammar in these aspects.The period from 1150 is known
3、 as the Middle English period. It is know as the period inflections. This period was marked by important changes in the English language. The Norman Conquest was the cause of these changes. The change of this period had a great effect on both grammar and vocabulary. In this period many Old English w
4、ords were lost, but thousands of words borrowed from French and Latin appeared in the English vocabulary. In the Middle English period grammatical gender disappeared, grammatical gender was completely replaced by the natural gender.Modern English period extends from 1500 to the present day. The Earl
5、y modern English period extends from 1500 to 1700. The chief influence of this time was great humanistic movement of the Renaissance. The influence of Latin and Greek on English was great. The nineteenth and twentieth centuries are a period of rapid expansion for the English vocabulary in the histor
6、y of the English language.The development of the English language in America can be separated into three periods: The first period extends from the settlement of Jamestown in 1607 to the end of colonial times. In this period the population in America numbered about four million people, 90 of percent
7、 of whom came from Britain. The second period covers the expansion of the original thirteen colonies. This time may be said to close with the Civil War, about 1860. This period was marked by the arrival of the new immigrantsfrom Ireland and Germany. The third period, since the Civil War, is marked b
8、y an important change in the source from which the European immigrants came. They came from northern and southern Europe in large numbers.As time went on, the English language gradually changed on both sides of the Atlantic. The Americans adopted many words from foreign languages and invented large
9、number of new words to meet their various needs.American English began in the seventeenth century. At the beginning of the 17th century the English language was brought to North American by colonists from English. They used the language spoken in England, that is, Elizabethan English, the language u
10、sed by Shakespeare, Milton and Banyan. At first the language stayed the same as the language used in Britain, but slowly the language began to change. Sometimes, the English spoken in American changed but sometimes the language spoken in the place stayed the same, while the language in England chang
11、ed.Following American independence, famous persons like Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and Webster began to consider that the country should have a language of its own. English in America has developed a character(特点) of its own, reflecting the life and the physical and social environment of the Amer
12、ican people.A Brief Look at the History of EnglishThe history of English is conventionally, if perhaps too neatly, divided into three periods usually called Old English (or Anglo-Saxon), Middle English, and Modern English. The earliest period begins with the migration of certain Germanic tribes from
13、 the continent to Britain in the fifth century A. D., though no records of their language survive from before the seventh century, and it continues until the end of the eleventh century or a bit later. By that time Latin, Old Norse (the language of the Viking invaders), and especially the Anglo-Norm
14、an French of the dominantclass after the Norman Conquest in 1066 had begun to have a substantial impact on the lexicon, and the well-developed inflectional system that typifies the grammar of Old English had begun to break down. The following brief sample of Old English prose illustrates several of
15、the significant ways in which change has so transformed English that we must look carefully to find points of resemblancebetween the language of the tenth century and our own. It is taken from Aelfrics Homily on St. Gregory the Great and concerns the famous story of how that pope came to send missio
16、naries to convert the Anglo-Saxons to Christianity after seeing Anglo-Saxon boys for sale as slaves in Rome.A few of these words will be recognized as identical in spelling with their modern equivalents - he, of, him, for, and, on - and the resemblance of a few others to familiar words may be guesse
17、d - nama to name, comon to come, wre to were, ws to was - but only those who have made a special study of Old English will be able to read the passage with understanding. The sense of it is as follows: Again he St. Gregory asked what might be the name of the people from which they came. It was answe
18、red to him that they were named Angles. Then he said, Rightly are they called Angles because they have the beauty of angels, and it is fitting that such as they should be angels companions in heaven. Some of the words in the original have survived in altered form, including axode (asked), hu (how),
19、rihtlice (rightly), engla (angels), habba (have), swilcum (such), heofonum (heaven), and beon (be). Others, however, have vanished from our lexicon, mostly without a trace, including several that were quite common words in Old English: eft again, eode people, nation, cw said, spoke, gehatene called,
20、 named, wlite appearance, beauty, and geferan companions. Recognition of some words is naturally hindered by the presence of two special characters, , called thorn, and , called edh, which served in Old English to represent the sounds now spelled with th.Other points worth noting include the fact th
21、at the pronoun system did not yet, in the late tenth century, include the third person plural forms beginning with th-: hi appears where we would use they. Several aspects of word order will also strike the reader as oddly unlike ours. Subject and verb are inverted after an adverb - a cw he Then sai
22、d he - a phenomenon not unknown in Modern English but now restricted to a few adverbs such as never and requiring the presence of an auxiliary verb like do or have. In subordinate clauses the main verb must be last, and so an object or a preposition may precede it in a way no longer natural: e hi of
23、 comon which they from came, for an e hi engla wlite habba because they angels beauty have.Perhaps the most distinctive difference between Old and Modern English reflected in Aelfrics sentences is the elaborate system of inflections, of which we now have only remnants. Nouns, adjectives, and even th
24、e definite article are inflected for gender, case, and number: re eode (of) the people is feminine genitive, and singular, Angle Angles is masculine, accusative, and plural, and swilcum such is masculine, dative, and plural. The system of inflections for verbs was also more elaborate than ours: for
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