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Lecture notes

language change

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Notes and a timeline of english langauge change for history and english at all exam boards, in depth a star level.

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  • June 10, 2024
  • 8
  • 2023/2024
  • Lecture notes
  • Self taught
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tinnopasta
Language change over
time

 Analysis of
historical;
varieties of
language
 AO1, AO3, AO4
 36 marks
 P2q3
 Old vs new text
no older than
1600
 Need to know
about different
periods of time



Slang words examples:

Bea, sick, chill, dead, fairs, gutted, fam, bruv, innit, chippy, slay, bunda, fit, peak, bare



Early modern English c1450-1750

 English renaissance
 Standardisation – process of forming a uniform language codified in dictionaries, education
and government texts that demands conformity by all variant language forms
 London English – most prestigious
 Latin continues to be the literary language as is as more eloquent and cultured than English
 William Shakespeare – created romantic comedies and coined about 2000 words such as
‘bedroom’ ‘critic’ ‘downstairs’
 1611 – king James bible ‘a stumbling block’
 Printing press – Caxton 1476 brought to England
 Great vowels shift 1400-1700 – changed vowel and some consonants sounds, often letters do
not reflect pronunciation after this, long vowel sounds changed to shorter and more silent
letters were produced
 Brought words from Africa, Asia, and new world Languages
 A large number of Greek, Latin and French words entered the English language

Modern English c1750-1950

 Worlds first industrial revolution in Britain
 British empire gains global power and introduces English education
 Codification of English through dictionaries and English grammars – Dr Johnson’s a dictionary
of the English language 1755 – started as prescriptive and ended as descriptivist accepting
language change
 Loanwords from native language of colonisation

,  1762 – Robert Lowth published the first English grammar book – rules such as don’t use a
double negative and explains this using science, or never end a sentence on a preposition, or
never split an infinitive – early prescriptivist
 Many writers made attempts to define the lexicon and grammar – Johnson and Lowth –
leading to the view that non-standard dialects were inferior

Late modern English c1950-present

 British empire is dismantled
 New form of standard English emerges in previous colonies
 English becomes the global language of technological revolution
 New words due to technology
 Compulsory education helps standardisation

Orthography

- 18th century: long s from old English used initially and medially but not at the end of
words and spelling is often idiosyncratic. Long s replaced by the short s as printing
practices deemed it to be unnecessary
- 19th century: more consistent and standardised spelling due to a more literate society as
schooling was offered to all children
- 20th/21st century: standardised spelling rules as well as non-standard forms with the
inclusion of compute, technology, and text messaging
- The older the text the more likely there is to differ in spellings
- Some may only be apparent in a facsimile of the original text; others will be retained
even when the text is typed modern
- u/v convention (swaps)
- final excessive e = remnant of the old inflectional system which no longer serves any
grammatical function
- significant landmarks of the standardisation of spelling were the publication of the king
James bible 1611v and Samuel Johnson’s dictionary in 1755
- idiosyncratic – no direct explanation
- long s interchangeable with short s

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