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Rex Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

How the English language was born?

0 The English language has been shaped by a number of other languages over the centuries, and many English speakers know that Latin and German were two of the most important. What many people don't realize is how much the French language has influenced English. 02br
00Without going into too much detail, I want to give a little bit of background about the other languages which shaped English. It was born out of the dialects of three German tribes (Angles, Jutes, and Saxons) who settled in Britain in about 450 A.D. This group of dialects forms what linguists refer to as Anglo-Saxon, and at some point this language developed into what we know as Old English. This Germanic base was influenced in varying degrees by Celtic, Latin, and Scandinavian (Old Norse) - the languages spoken by invading armies. 02br
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00Bill Bryson calls the Norman conquest of 1066 the "final cataclysm [which] awaited the English language." (1) When William the Conqueror became king of England, French took over as the language of the court, administration, and culture - and stayed there for 300 years. Meanwhile, English was "demoted" to everyday, unprestigious uses. These two languages existed side by side in England with no noticeable difficulties; in fact, since English was essentially ignored by grammarians during this time, it took advantage of its lowly status to become a grammatically simpler language and, after only 70 or 80 years existing side-by-side with French, Old English segued into Middle English.02br
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00Would our friends agree with the above description? How the language English was born has explained in the above.02br
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00The dialect of three German tribes was the root of English. I haven't heard this theory before.0240hrefhttp://french.about.com/library/bl-frenchinenglish.htm
  

Top answer

0 In my opinion, current English has its root in the language spoken by the children whose father was a settler from Scandinavia and whose mother was an Anglo-Saxon. If you take 1000 English words most frequently used in everyday speech, they are either of Anglo-Saxon origin or of Old Norse origin. The influence of the French language is rather minor.

  • 0 In my opinion, current English has its root in the language spoken by the children whose father was a settler from Scandinavia and whose mother was an Anglo-Saxon.
  • If you take 1000 English words most frequently used in everyday speech, they are either of Anglo-Saxon origin or of Old Norse origin.
  • The influence of the French language is rather minor.
  • It is true that English vocabulary contains many words of French origin but most of them are words that are used only in speech or writing of higher registers.
  • 02br 02br 00It is also true that the conquest by the French Norman greatly impacted on the English language.
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2 Answers
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0 In my opinion, current English has its root in the language spoken by the children whose father was a settler from Scandinavia and whose mother was an Anglo-Saxon. If you take 1000 English words most frequently used in everyday speech, they are either of Anglo-Saxon origin or of Old Norse origin. The influence of the French language is rather minor. It is true that English vocabulary contains
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0 Thanks paco for the comments.02br
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00I would like to hear what the others say on this.0-

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