Title: A%20History%20of%20the%20English%20Language
1A History of the English Language
- Chapter 5 Early Modern English
2Time Line 1
- 1509 Henry VIII
- 1534 Act of Supremacy
- 1536 Small monasteries dissolved
- 1534 English translation of Bible in any church
- 1547 Edward VI
- 1553 Mary Tudor
- 1558 Elizabeth I
- 1559 Act of Supremacy restores laws of Henry
VIII - 1574 First company of actors theatre building
begins - 1584 Colonists at Roanoke
- 1600 English East India Co. Formed
- 1603 James I
- 1607 London Co. plants colony at Jamestown
- 1611 King James Bible
3Time Line 2
- 1616 Death of Shakespeare
- 1625 Charles I
- 1639 English established at Madras
- 1642-1646 Civil War
- 1649 Charles I beheaded
- 1649 Commonwealth established
- 1653 Cromwell becomes Lord Protector
- 1660 Charles II restored to the throne
- 1689 William and Mary proclaimed king and
queen in England and Ireland - 1702 Queen Anne
- 1707 Union of England and Scotland as Great
Britain - 1727 George I
- 1760 George III
- 1775-1783 American War of
Independence
4Political, Cultural, and Technological Influences
- 1 The Introduction and Dissemination of
Printing 1476 William Caxton introduces
printing press - 2 The Renaissance
- 3 The Protestant Reformation
- 4 The Enclosures
- 5 Exploration and Colonization
- 6 The American Revolution
5The Self-Conscious Language
- Writings in Latin
- Francis Bacon, Novum Organum (1620)
- Isaac Newton, Philosophia Naturalis Principia
Mathematica (1687) Latin works
6The Debate over Vocabulary
- Early Modern English is the Age of Linguistic
Anxiety debates about its deficiencies and its
purity - Earliest perceived inadequacy was in the lexicon
- Borrowing was the easiest and most obvious way to
fill the gaps and Latin was the easiest and most
obvious language from which to borrow - Largest number of borrowings in the history of
English - Borrowing was deliberate to improve the language
7Inkhorn terms vs. Archaisms
- Thomas WilsonSome seeke so far for outlandish
English, that they forget altogether their
mothers tongue. And I dare sweare this, if some
of their mothers were aliue, thei were not able
to tell what they say The vnlearned or foolish
phantasticall, that smelles but of learning (such
fellowes as haue seen learned men in their daies)
wil so Latin their tongues, that the simple can
not but wonder at their talkes - Edmund Spenser, John Cheke crossed vs.
crucified, fleshstrings/muscles grosswitted,
endsay, over-reacher, drymock - discretion, exaggerate, transumptive,
effodicate, exinanite
8The Spelling Reformers
- The ideal a simplified, consistent, phonetic,
standardized spelling system for English - John Cheke (1569), Thomas Smith (1568), John Hart
(1569), William Bullokar (1580), Richard
Mulcaster (1582) - No effect of the proposed reforms
9The Dictionary Makers
- Robert Cawdrey (1604) A Table Alphabeticall,
conteyning and teaching the true writing, and
understanding of hard usuall English wordes,
borrowed from the Hebrew, Greek, Latine, or
French c. With the interpretation thereof by
plaine English words. gathered for the benefit
helpe of Ladies, Gentlewomen, or any other
unskilfull persons. Whereby they may the more
easilie and better understand many hard English
wordes, which they shall heare or read in
Scriptures, Sermons, or elseqhere, and also be
made able to use the same aptly themselues - Samuel Johnson, A Dictionary of the English
Language (1755)
10The Movement for an English Academy
- Accademia della Crusca (1582)
- Académie Française (1635)
- Daniel Defoe (1697), Jonathan Swift (1712),
Joseph Addison (1711) - John Adams (1803) in the US
11Prescriptive Grammars
- Thomas Wilson, The Arte of Rhetorique (1553)
- William Bullokar, Bref Grammar (1586)
- Alexander Gil, Logonomia Anglica (1621)
- John Wallis, Grammatica Linguae Anglicanae
(1653) all Latin-based - Robert Lowth, A Short Introduction to English
Grammar (1762) - Joseph Priestley, The Rudiments of English
Grammar (1762) - Noah Webster, Plain and Comprehensive Grammar
(1784) - Lindley Murray, English Grammar (1795)
12Early Modern English Phonology Basic Features
13Consonants
- Addition of phonemic /N Z/
- sing vs. sin
- pleasure, vision assibilation
- The postvocalic allophones of /h/, Ç and X
disappeared
14The Great Vowel Shift 1
15The Great Vowel Shift 2
16Great Vowel Shift 3
- threat, head, death, deaf
- cheat, plead, wreath, leaf
- break, yea, steak, great
- boot, loose, mood, pool, soon
- foot, good, hook, wood, wool
- flood, blood
- But, thou, false guardian of a charge too
good/Thou, mean deserter of thy brothers blood
(Alexander Pope) - root, soot, room
17Development of Short Vowels 1
- All remaining final unstressed -es from ME were
lost during EModE - /æ/ gt / / before /r/ and voiceless fricatives
17th and 18th c. harm, scarf, hard, park
staff, class, path, fast, half classical,
passage no change if the fricative was followed
by another vowel - / / resulting from /a/ before /l/ all, fall,
walk, salt, chalk, halt after /w/ want, wash,
swan
18Development of Short Vowels 2
- A following nasal tends to raise /E/ to /I/
wing, England, hinge, mingle, nimble pen,sense - Dialectal variant in Britain extensively used in
US /A/ for /O/ hot, rock, pocket,top, shot - /u/ centering and unrounding to /V/ run, mud,
cut, cup unrounding did not occur in protected
environments full, push, bull, bush, butcher
bulky, shrub put, putt
19Development of Short Vowels 3
- Influence of following /r/
- Lowering /Er/ to /Ar/ far, star, farm, barn
vs. Servant, sermon, certain, verdict, sterling - Lowering and centering /I u E/ to /E/ gt /W/
girl, dirty, hurt, her, curse - In many words, a following /r/ blocked the GVS
wear, bear, floor, sword, course, court
20Development of Diphtongs
- /iu/ and /Eu/ fell together as /iu/ then /iu/
became /ju/ pure, mute, beauty, accuse after
labial consonants, /ju/ almost always remains,
but after other consonants there is often
dialectically variable simplification to /u/
new, fruit, rude, duty, lute - ME /Au/ became /o/ cause, hawk before /l/ plus
a labial consonant /æ / or /a/ half, calm, palm
and /l/ was lost - /Ou/ gt /o/ gt /C/ know, blow, grow
- /ai/ gt /æi/ gt /e/ gt /Y/ day, pay, stake
21Spelling and Punctuation
- By the end of the 17th c., the principle of a
fixed spelling for every word was firmly
established for printed works, and , over the
course of the following century, personal
spelling followed - (Un)etymological spelling rhyme, indict,
victuals debt gt dette island aisle delight - Capitalization remained haphazard
- During the 16th c, the comma replaced the virgule
(/) as the primary mark of sentence-internal
punctuation - The apostrophe was used for contractions not
used for marking the possessive before late EModE
22Early Modern English Morphology Basic Facts 1
- In all essentials, noun morphology in EModE was
the same as that of PDE - By EModE, the s-possessive for both sg. and pl.
nouns was almost universal, although traces of
uninflected genitives remained. mother tongue,
lady slipper, for peace sake - John Browne his meadow, his deceased mother her
will, Mister Jones his cow after mine my wifes
her decease - in the calmest and most stillest night, less
happier lands, violentest, certainer, more bold,
most brave (Sh)
23Morphology Basic Facts 2
- Development of separate forms for possessive
adjectives and possessive pronouns my, mine
thy, thyne - Appearance of possessive its at the beginning of
the 17th c (between its lips, Sh) - During the 17th c., the sg. thou/thee forms
dropped out altogether sg.-pl. distinction lost
ye gave way to you in the 17th c result one
form you - who as a relative pronoun became frequent in
EModE and was rare before restrictive clauses
that, which and as used as relative pronouns All
the goods as was brought to our view
24Morphology Basic Facts 3
- Forming reflexive pronouns by combining -self
with the personal pronouns became more frequent
in EModE, but the older practice of using the
simple object form of the pronouns as a reflexive
continued thou dost thyself a pleasure, get thee
a good husband, I will shelter me heere (Sh) - General use of reflexive pronouns declined
- By the end of the EModE period, the division of
English verbs into strong and weak was no longer
viable - Collapse of the distinction between past tense
and past participle
25Morphology Basic Facts 4
- By the end of ME, weak verbs had become the
regular verbs of English, and almost any new verb
entering the language would follow this paradigm - By the end of EModE, the total number of verb
inflections had been reduced to its PDE state
the last vestiges of the -n infinitive
disappeared as did the present plural indicative
plural endings -n or -th the present participle
suffix -ing became universal in all dialects
second person sg. present ending -est survived
until the category was lost, that is, until you
supplanted thou
26Morphology Basic Facts 5
- Although -th was still being written as the
third-person sg. ending as late as the 18th c.,
the -s ending seems to have been universal in
speech from the 17th c. on - EModE was the period of great changes in what
were to become the modal auxiliaries of English
will moved into the category of modal
auxiliariesneed and dare in EModE the modals
were still sufficiently independent to appear
without a following infinitive I must away this
night, thou shalt to prison (Sh) can could still
mean know would was still the past tense of
will
27Morphology Basic Facts 6
- Verb-particle constructions became extremely
common during the period - New phrasal prepositions by means of, in spite
of, because of, with regard to, in accordance
with - The chief means of forming new adverbs from
existing adjectives in EModE was by adding -ly
plain adverbs were still common, however
28Early Modern English Syntax Basic Facts 1
- In most of the larger patterns, the syntax of
EModE is like that of PDE more elusive are the
differences that are merely statistical, such as
the greater use of the inflected subjunctive - A number of ways in which E ModE syntax differs
from that of PDE are negative ones e.g., market
data analysis sheets - The ME legacy of allowing single adjective
modifiers (especially Latinate adjectives) to
follow rather than precede their noun head
continued in EModE means convenient, faith
invincible
29Early Modern English Syntax Basic Facts 2
- A tendency remained to place the adverbial before
rather than after the words being modified which
he behind him left, and was by them examined - Double negatives became less common in EModE
- By the 16thc. have continued to suppress be in
compound tenses cf. this gentleman is happily
arrived I have since arrived did he not say my
brother was fled loves golden arrow at him
should have fled - The progressive was fully developed by the end of
the 16th c. though still used less frequently
30Early Modern English Syntax Basic Facts 3
- The combination of progressive and perfect in a
single verb phrase was still rare I have been
watching you the progressive passive (you are
being watched) did not develop until the late
18th c. the construction you have been being
watched did not appear until PDE - Passive constructions were less common
31Early Modern English Syntax Basic Facts 4
- The use of do as a dummy auxiliary for forming
interrogatives and negatives was fully developed
by EModE, but not yet obligatory I doubt it
not/I do not doubt you Why do you look on me/Why
look you so on me (Sh) - Be going to, have to, be obliged to, be about to
became common during EModE - I dont like to have to keep on nagging you
- EModE still had more word-order flexibility
32Stylistic Traditions
- The influence of Latin on English complex syntax
long, heavily subordinated, periodic sentences,
absolute participles were imitated - Plain style tradition found in the King James
Bible as a rival conception - Ornate style became popular
33Early Modern English Lexicon 1
- Loans from Latin and Greek English borrowed
roots and affixes to form new words that had not
existed in the classical languages themselves
cortex, cortical fibroma - An A-Z sample ambiguous, biceps, census,
decorate, emotion, fanatic, gladiator, harmonica,
identical, joke, lichen, mandible, navigate,
opponent, perfidious, quotation, ratio,
scintillate, tangent, ultimate, vacuum, zone
34The Early Modern English Lexicon 2
- Lexical doublets armor/armature chamber/camera
choir, chorus frail/fragile gender/genus
jealous/zealous mould/module pale/pallid
porch/portico prove/probe strait/strict
strange/extraneous treasure/thesaurus - Functional shifts fac simile, propaganda,
deficit, fiat, veto, tenet
35Loans from Other Languages
- French liaison, sociable, compute
- Italian trade, architecture, arts balcony,
bandit, ghetto, carnival, arsenal - Spanish and Portuguese mango, cashew, cigar,
papaya, cannibal, tomato, tortilla - Dutch prominence in seafaring gave nautical
words deck, smuggle, yacht etch, landscape,
sketch - German German loans have never been heavy in
English cobalt, gneiss, quartz, zinc, waltz
36Early Modern English Word-Formation 1
- Compounding
- The most productive type was noun noun gerund
noun spelling book walking stick possessive
noun noun saleswoman, townspeople verb noun
combinations catchword, pickpocket,
scatterbrain adjective noun commonplace, easy
chair, hotbed - Noun adjective bloodthirsty, knee-deep,
lifelong, top-heavy - Adjective noun -ed good-natured, red-haired
- Noun/adj Participle earthborn,painstaking,
henpecked, easy-going
37Early Modern English Word Formation 2
- Affixing has always been the single largest
source of new vocabulary items in English - Numeral 1530 ,numerality 1646, numerally 1646,
numerant 1660, numerous 1586, numerosity 1611,
numerously 1611, numerousness 1631, numerical
1628, numerically 1628, numerist 1646,
numerication 1694 - Functional Shift/Zero Derivation
- Accelerated during EModE guarantee, pioneer,
segment, cheat, contest, split, whimper, lower
38Semantic Processes
- Generalization and Narrowing
- Adventure unusual and exiciting experience
courage heart, mind, disposition, nature,
bravery, valor gt bravery, valor deer
animal gt mammals of the family Cervidae - Amelioration and Pejoration
- Lust pleasure, delight coy quiet, shy,
modest knave boy jolly arrogant, wanton,
lustful luxury lust, licentiousness boy
rascal, servant, slave fond idiotic, mad
artful, crafty, cunning
39Shakespeare, Richard III
40Development of English in the United States 1
- The development of English in the US is not
synonymous with the development of language,
since there were already indigenous Native
American languages when the European settlers
first arrived - The language that the British brought with them
to America, beginning with the first settlement
in Jamestown, Virginia, 1607, is Early Modern
English, and is largely the English of South-East
England
41English in the United States 2
- Subsequent development in America affected by a
number of factors - The source of the original British dialect
- Maintenance of contact with the home country
- Patterns of settlement
- Influences of languages other than English
- Caused by immigration
- Caused by contact with speakers of other
languages within America - Social and geographical mobility
42Settlement by Region The Original Thirteen
Colonies 1
- New England, the Middle Atlantic States, South
Atlantic States (Georgia) - Mid-Atlantic Jamestown was mostly settled by
speakers of south-eastern English dialect, though
there was some admixture of other dialects, and
all social classes were represented in Virginia - From the outset the population of the
Mid-Atlantic states was mixed in character and
did not have the solid English core of the other
areas
43Settlement by Region 2
- The settlement of New England began around
Massachusetts Bay in 1620, extended to
Connecticut in 1634 - The majority of the settlers came from the
eastern and south-eastern counties of England,
with a significant number of Puritans from East
Anglia
44How, Why and When American English Began to
Diverge from British English
- The physical separation of America from Britain
- The different physical conditions encountered by
the settlers - Contact with non-native speakers of English, both
Native American and immigrant - Developing political differences between the two
countries and the growing American sense of
national identity
45Noah Webster (1758-1843)
- Dissertations of the English Language (1789) As
an independent nation our honor requires us to
have a system of our own, in language as well as
government. Great Britain, whose children we are,
should no longer be our standard for the taste
of her writers is already corrupted, and her
language on the decline. But if it were not so,
she is at too great distance to be our model, and
to instruct us in the principles of our own
tongue. A national language is a band of
national union.