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The history of the English language

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Title: The history of the English language


1
The history of the English language
Where on Earth did it come from?
2
Indo-European languages
  • Are all these languages related?

3
Proto Indo-European
  • Balto-Slavic Germanic Hellenic Italic Indo-Iranian

Baltic Slavic
North Germanic East Germanic West Germanic
Indic Iranian
Umbrian Oscan Latin
Old English Middle English New English
French Italian Portuguese Spanish
4
Do these words sound similar?
5
The Indo-Europeans
  • Who were they?
  • They were a nomadic people who ventured westward
    into Europe, southward into Persia and India
  • How long ago did they live?
  • About 5,500 years ago
  • What was their language like?
  • There is no documented evidence of it, although
    similarities between words make it seem probable
  • As they became isolated, the language of each
    group consequently evolved independent of the
    rest

6
What is a dead language?
  • Sanskrit and Latin are dead languages
  • They are no longer spoken as a primary language,
    they havent changed
  • They do not evolve like English or Italian

7
What is a living language?
  • It evolves every day
  • Words that were common in 1950s may no longer be
    used today
  • Or they have different meanings than they used to
    have
  • Would Shakespeare know what H-to-the-Izzo means?

8
What is the difference between human speech and
animal noises?
  • Animal cries are not articulate
  • They lack, for example, the kind of structure
    given by the contrast between vowels and
    consonants
  • And they lack the kind of structure that enables
    us to divide a human utterance into words
  • We can change an utterance by replacing one word
    by another

9
Voiced sounds
  • The sounds in which voice is used are called
    voiced sounds, but some speech-sounds are made
    with the vocal cords in the wide open position,
    and are therefore voiceless (or breathed)
  • In fact the English v and f are made in exactly
    the same way, except that one is voiced and the
    other voiceless
  • Cover your ears and utter a v, then an f

10
Nasal sounds
  • In a vowel sound voice is switched on and the
    mouth cavity is left unobstructed, so that the
    air passes out freely
  • Try saying the vowels with your mouth open
  • Now try saying the consanants with your mouth
    open
  • If the nasal passage is also opened, we get a
    nasal sound like those of French bon, good, and
    brun brown, but for English vowels the nasal
    passage is normally closed, though some American
    speakers habitually leave the door ajar and speak
    with a nasal twang

11
The tongue
  • The quality of a vowel is determined by the
    position of the tongue, lower jaw and lips,
    because these can change the shape of the cavity
    that the air passes through and different shapes
    give different resonances
  • The tongue is the most important
  • If we raise part of our tongue, we divide the
    mouth passage into two cavities of different
    sizes, one at the back and one at the front

12
The position of the tongue
  • To describe any vowel, we specify the position of
    the highest part of the tongue we can do this in
    terms of its height
  • Three categories open, half-open and closed

13
Glides
  • Glides occur when there are vowels in which the
    speech organs change their position in the course
    of the sound
  • They are also know as diphthongs
  • GRAPHIC on page 7
  • In all vowels, the mouth passage is unobstructed
  • If it is obstructed at any time during the
    production of a speech sound the resulting sound
    will be a consonant

14
Vocal sounds
  • Any language selects a small number of vocal
    sounds out of all those which human beings are
    able to make, and uses them as its building
    bricks
  • The selection is different for every language

15
Vowels
  • Italian uses only seven different vowels, and
    manages with 27 basic sounds
  • Hawaiian is said to manage with only 13
  • Some languages, on the other hand, use 60 or
    more
  • There are 45 basic sounds in English

16
Intonation
  • In English, we use intonation to distinguish
    between different sentences, but not between
    different words
  • In some languages, like Chinese and Thai, musical
    pitch is a distinguishing feature of the single
    word if you change the intonation it becomes a
    different word
  • Such languages are called tone languages

17
Pronouns
  • The system of pronouns changes with time four
    hundred years ago there were the forms thou,
    thee, thy and thine, and there was no form its
  • This is a long-term process individuals cannot
    just invent a new pronoun

18
Syntax
  • We say the good old times, not the old good
    times and A beautiful young American girl, not
    an American young beautiful girl. There is a
    complicated set of rules regulating the way a
    phrase of this kind is put together in English
    (rules which English speakers have obviously
    internalized).

19
Subject-Verb-Object
  • Example The dog (subject) bit (verb) John
    (object)
  • In normal English, the Subject (The Dog) comes
    before the Verb (bit) which itself comes before
    the Direct Object (John), and it is this
    word-orderwhich tells us which is the bitter and
    which the bitten
  • But this Subject-Verb-Order is not found in all
    languages. Many languages, like Turkish and
    classical Latin, have the equivalent of The dog
    bit John
  • Welsh, for example, has the equivalent of Bit
    the dog John
  • One of the major syntactic changes in the English
    language since Anglo-Saxon times has been the
    disappearance of the S-O-V and VSO types of
    word-order, and the establishment of the SVO type
    as normal

20
English vs. French
  • In English, an adjective normally precedes its
    noun, as in white socks, but in some languages
    such as French it usually follows it, socks
    white
  • In French, the possessive also follows the noun,
    as in la mort de mon oncle, but in this case
    English has a choice
  • The possessive can come before the noun (my
    uncles death) or after it (the death of my uncle)

21
Speech dialect
  • Language belongs to a group of people, not to an
    individual
  • The group that use any given language is called
    the speech community
  • In the United States, we speak English. But
    within this country, there are several dialects

22
The Romans
  • Conquered a large portion of Europe, including
    England
  • Latin, the language of the Romans, was the root
    of Spanish, French, Portugese and Italian
  • Latin influences on England fade away as Roman
    Empire collapses in the fourth century

23
The Barbarians
  • Barbarians from Germany and surrounding lands
    invade England
  • English evolved from their language

24
The evolution of English
  • The English language has changed enormously in
    the last thousand years
  • New words have appeared and some of the old ones
    disappeared
  • Words have changed in meaning
  • There have been changes in word order, the
    permissible ways in which words can be arranged
    to make meaningful utterances

25
The three stages of English
  • The 12th and 15th centuries were periods of
    particularly rapid changes in English
  • This makes it convenient to divide the history of
    the English language into three broad periods,
    which are usually called Old English, Middle
    English and Modern English
  • No exact dates can be drawn, but Old English
    covers from the first Anglo-Saxon settlements in
    England to about 1100, Middle English from about
    1100 to about 1500 and Modern English from about
    1500 to the present day

26
Old English
  • Beowulf is the most famous work of literature
    from this time, although its origins probably
    precedes Old English
  • There is some archeological evidence that Saxons
    settled in East Anglia and the Vale of York while
    Britain was still a Roman province, but the main
    settlements were made after the Roman legions had
    withdrawn from Britain in AD 410
  • The traditional accounts of the landing of
    Hengest and Horsa in Kent place it in the year
    449
  • This was around the time that English was born

27
Germanic influences on English
  • The English language has its foundation in the
    West German dialects
  • From them derive native suffixes and prefixes
    which are used on words to denote special
    relationships such as the y in holy or the en
    in golden or the ish in childish or the like
    in childlike

28
Old English vs. Modern English
  • The pronouns of modern English are essentially
    the same as those of Old English I, we, you, he,
    it, the, this, that, who, what, mine, your, each,
    and any
  • Our numbers were their numbers too, including
    words such as twin and other, meaning the second
    in Old English

29
What words remain unchanged
  • Our system of comparison is ancient good,
    better, best and evil, worse, worst were Saxon.
    The way our verbs are conjugated comes from those
    dialects bid, bade, bidden or sing, sang, sung
  • The basic vocabulary of modern English comes
    through the ages unchanged from Old English
    love, say, live, have, own, do, be, will, bury,
    name, reach, long, strong, high, quick, sun,
    food, hand, finger, friend, brother, father,
    mother, stone, earth

30
Anglo-Saxon settlements
  • The Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain must not be
    thought of as the arrival of a unified invading
    army, but rather as the arrival and penetration
    of various uncoordinated bands of adventurers in
    different parts of the country, beginning in the
    middle of fifth century and going all the way
    through the sixth
  • The struggle with the Romano-Celtic population
    was a long one, and Anglo-Saxon domination in
    England was not assured until late in the sixth
    century

31
The period of King Arthur
  • We know little about this struggle it was the
    age of King Arthur and there are more legends
    than hard facts
  • By about 700, the Anglo-Saxons had occupied most
    of England and also a considerable part of
    southern Scotland

32
Differences between English and Scandinavian
during Old English
  • Scandinavian has sk where English sh. Hence,
    there are many pairs of words in English with
    these phonetic differences which originally had
    the same meaning skirt and shirt raise and
    rear screech and shriek

33
Anglo-Saxons and the Celts
  • The Anglo-Saxon conquest was not just the arrival
    of a ruling minority, but the settlement of a
    whole people
  • Their language remained the dominant one and
    there are few traces of Celtic influence on Old
    English
  • The names of some English towns were taken over
    from the Celts such as London and Leeds

34
Celtic influence on Old English
  • The failure of Celtic to influence Old English to
    any great extent does not mean that the Britons
    were all killed or driven out
  • There is in fact evidence that a considerable
    number of Britons lived among the Anglo-Saxons,
    but they were a defeated people whose language
    had no prestige compared with that of the
    conquerors

35
West Saxon
  • Four dialects immerged on the island of Britain
  • The unification of England under the West Saxon
    kings led to the recognition of the West Saxon
    dialect as a literary standard
  • The surviving texts from the Old English period
    are in four main dialects West Saxon, Kentish,
    Mercian and Northumbrian
  • Mercian and Northumbrian, which are grouped
    together as Anglican, form the link between Old
    English and Modern English
  • SEE PAGE 105.

36
The West Saxon dialect
  • Although West Saxon became the literary standard
    of a united England in the late Anglo-Saxon
    period, it is not the direct ancestor of modern
    standard English, which is mainly derived an
    Anglican dialect

37
Christianity and its affects
  • We know little about the Anglo Saxons until
    Christianity came, introducing writing to them
  • The conversion of the English to Christianity
    began in about the year 600 and took a century to
    complete
  • It was carried out from two directions, the
    Celtic church penetrating from the Northwest and
    the Roman church from the Southeast

38
Assimilation
  • Assimilation is the changing of a sound under the
    influence of a neighboring one
  • Until about 1700, words like swan and wash
    rhymed with words like man and wash
  • At one time, the T in castle and Christmas was
    pronounced
  • In addition, the K in knight and know were also
    pronounced

39
Pagan Gods
  • Although Christianity was widely embraced, some
    vestiges of the pagan times survived
  • Tiw, Woden and Thunor (thunder), corresponding to
    the Scandinavian god Thor, have given their names
    to Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, while Wodens
    consort Frig (Love) has given her name to Friday
  • More remarkably, the goddess of spring, Eastre,
    has probably given her name to the Christian
    festival of Easter

40
Norsemen and Normans
  • During the later part of the Old English period,
    two different groups of Non-English speakers
    invaded the country
  • Both groups were Scandinavian in origin, but
    whereas the first had retained its Scandinavian
    speech, the second had settled in northern France
    and become French-speaking
  • Both of their languages, Old Norse and Old
    French, had a considerable influence on English

41
The Vikings in England
  • The invasion of Europe by the Scandinavian
    Vikings, which took place between about 750 and
    1050, was the last phase of the expansion of the
    early Germanic peoples
  • Its basic cause was perhaps overpopulation in a
    region of poor natural resources, but there were
    other contributory causes
  • The custom of leaving inheritance to the eldest
    son meant that there were always younger sons
    wanting to carve out inheritances for themselves

42
The Vikings and their search for new lands
  • Political conflicts drove many noblemen into
    exile
  • And then, in the late eighth century, Charlemagne
    destroyed the power of the Frisians, who had
    hitherto been the greatest maritime power of
    Northwest Europe, and thereby left open the
    sea-route southward for the Vikings
  • At about the same date, the ancient craft of boat
    building in Scandinavia reached the stage at
    which it could produce the magnificent ocean
    going sailing ships which served the Vikings for
    trade, piracy and colonization. The Vikings, by
    the way, are believed to have visited America 450
    years before Columbus

43
The Battle of Hastings 1066
  • William the Conqueror sails from Normandy
    (France) to England, where he becomes ruler
  • Commoners still speak English, although French is
    the official language
  • The Norman Conquest of 1066, known as the Battle
    of Hastings, had a profound influence on the
    English language
  • For some centuries, English ceased to be the
    language of the governing class
  • There was no such thing as a standard literary
    English
  • When English did once again become the language
    of the whole country it had changed a good deal
    under the influence of the conquerors

44
Norman rule
  • The rulers of Normandy had originally been
    Scandinavian Vikings, who occupied parts of
    northern France and were eventually recognized by
    the French crown
  • By the middle of the 11th century, the Normans
    had long lost their Scandinavian speech
  • They spoke French and were essentially French in
    culture
  • Had the French continued to dominate, this
    process might have been carried to completion
  • Since it did not happen, we have a redundancy in
    the English vocabulary pairs of synonyms, one
    French and the other native English hog, swine,
    pig, farrow, sow, and board are all terms to do
    with raising pigs, but beside them we place the
    French word pork
  • Other examples are hut (Eng) vs. cottage (Fre).

45
French takes over
  • French became the language of the upper classes
    in England simply because it was the language of
    the conquerors, not because of any cultural
    superiority on their part
  • What happened was that the native aristocracy was
    largely destroyed and their lands were
    distributed to Williams Norman followers
  • Anybody whose native language was English who
    wanted to get on in the world had to learn French

46
French loan words
  • French loan words first appeared mostly around
    London, the center of fashion and administration,
    and spread northwards and westwards from there
  • Latin was the language of the church, of
    scholarship, and of international communication.

47
Language of the people?
  • Although French was for a long time the prestige
    language in England, it was never the other
    tongue of the majority of the population
  • An event which contributed to the triumph of
    English was King Johns loss of Normandy to the
    French crown in the opening years of the 13th
    century
  • The ties with Normandy were severed and the
    Norman nobility gradually became English

48
English triumphs
  • The fourteenth century sees the definitive
    triumph of English
  • French was now rapidly ceasing to be the mother
    tongue of even the nobility and those who wanted
    to speak French had to learn it
  • When King Henry IV seized the throne in 1399,
    England for the first time since the Norman
    conquest had a king whose mother tongue was
    English

49
Two Forms of English
  • There were two standard forms of English, that of
    England and that of Scotland
  • Scotland was an independent kingdom and the
    language of the lowlands and of the royal court
    was what they called Inglis
  • The Highlands were still Gaelic-speaking

50
And the winner is
  • The English that we speak today evolved from the
    East Midland dialect of Middle English
  • This was probably due to the importance of the
    East Midlands in English cultural, economic and
    administrative life
  • This is where Cambridge University is located

51
French loan words
  • In the 13th and 14th centuries there was a flood
    of loan words from French
  • This was no surprise as when bilingual speakers
    were changing over to English for such purposes
    as government and literature, they felt the need
    for the specialized terms that they were
    accustomed to in those fields and brought them
    over from French

52
Differences between French and English
  • If you know Modern French, you may sometimes be
    puzzled by the difference between an English word
    and the corresponding French word
  • Sometimes these differences are due to changes
    that have taken place in the pronunciation of
    both languages since Medieval times
  • Standard Modern French is descended from a
    central French dialect of Old French, but the
    Normans spoke a Northern French dialect, which
    differed from it in a number of ways

53
Loan words blend into English
  • The early French loan words were so well
    assimilated into English that they were soon felt
    as not in any way foreign
  • This made it easier for the language to accept
    later Romance and Latin loans.

54
Middle English
  • Canterbury Tales is the most famous work of
    literature from this period

55
Modern English (1550 to present)
  • Shakespeare lived during this period, although he
    wrote in a higher form of English

56
Three major developments
  • Three great developments mark the advent of
    modern English
  • 1) British colonialism
  • 2) the Renaissance
  • 3) economic and technical development (the
    industrial revolution and the development of
    modern science)

57
A class difference
  • The merchant class, who exploited and settled the
    territories opened up by British explorers did
    not belong to the aristocracy which spoke the
    London dialect
  • Hence, New England was settled largely by
    speakers of the East Anglican dialect
  • Social struggles between the two dialect groups
    were an instrumental cause for the American
    revolution and may have contributed to the
    radical shift in the pronunciation of English in
    modern times

58
The Renaissance
  • Greek classics are rediscovered following the
    Dark Ages
  • Other languages borrow from Greek
  • The Renaissance
  • During the peak of the Renaissance, from 1580 to
    1660, a flood of Latin loan words were borrowed
    into English
  • We owe the b in our modern spelling of debt and
    doubt to Renaissance etymologizing, for the
    earlier spellings were dette and doute
  • The b was inserted through the influence of Latin
    debitum and dubitare

59
English in the Scientific Age
  • By about 1700, the main changes in pronunciation
    that made the Great Vowel Shift were all
    completed
  • Third person forms like loveth had disappeared
    from ordinary educated speech
  • The pronouns thou and thee and the corresponding
    verb-forms like lovest had disappeared from
    standard usage
  • The language differed only slightly from present
    day English

60
Spelling
  • In Middle English and early Modern English, there
    had been no standard spelling
  • Spellings varied from writer to writer
  • Even proper names were not fixed
  • Shakespeare in the three signatures on his will
    used two spellings of his own surname
  • The earliest English dictionary was published in
    1604
  • The first one contained 2,500 words, while one
    from 1676 contained about 25,000

61
The Influence of printing
  • A powerful force for standardization was the
    introduction of printing
  • By the middle of the sixteenth century, although
    there was still no standard system, there were
    quite a number of widely accepted conventions

62
The standard spelling system
  • The standard spelling system which became
    established by the end of the seventeenth century
    was already an archaic one and broadly speaking,
    represents the pronunciation of English before
    the Great Vowel Shift
  • This explains many of the oddities of present day
    English spelling
  • We still preserve letters in our spelling which
    represent sounds which long ago ceased to be
    pronounced like the k and gh of knight, the t in
    castle, w in wrong
  • Distinctions are made in spelling where there is
    no longer any distinction in pronunciation, as in
    meat/meet and sea/see

63
English as a world language
  • The spread of English was encouraged by
    deliberate government policy
  • After the 1745 Jacobite rebellion in Scotland,
    many schools were established in the Scottish
    highlands
  • The language used was English Gaelic was
    forbidden

64
British colonialism
  • The spread of English beyond the United Kingdom
    started with the English settlements in North
    America in the 17th and 18th centuries
  • By the early 19th century, Britain had firm
    control of a number of islands in the Caribbean
    Antigua, Barbados, Jamaica, St Kitts, Trinidad
    and Tobago
  • British domination of the Indian subcontinent
    dates from the second half of the 18th century
  • In the late 18th century Britain began
    settlements in Australia
  • In the 19th century, the British took control
    over South Africa from the Dutch
  • They also controlled Singapore, New Zealand and
    Hong Kong

65
American English
  • After the American Revolution, contact between
    two countries was severed for more than a century
  • Americans make a conscious effort to de-Anglicize
    English
  • We still understand each other, but there are
    noticeable differences

66
British English
  • The changes were both intentional and incidental.
    Many of our founding fathers, including George
    Washington, had considered themselves Englishmen
    up until the outbreak of the revolution
  • They would have talked like Englishmen and had
    similar habits and mannerisms
  • Pronounce schedule, cant and mind the gap

67
Coming to America
  • Once it was no longer a colony of England,
    America received an influx of immigrants from
    Germany, Ireland, France, Italy and China
  • The English these people spoke was nothing close
    to the speech of Washington

68
Immigrants adjust to their new home
  • While immigrants may have a hard time perfecting
    their new language, their children born there
    will usually have no problem
  • Why? Because the influence of the general speech
    environment (friends, school) is stronger than
    that at home
  • If a large and closely knot group of people adopt
    a new language, however, then the modifications
    that they make in it may persist among their
    descendants, even if the latter no longer speak
    the original language

69
Three main dialects in the U.S.
  • Northern New England, New York, New Jersey
  • Midland Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin
  • Southern Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi

70
Languages of the world
  • There are about 6,000 human languages spoken in
    the world today, which all fall under this
    definition of languages
  • You can group most of them into two categories
    analytic and synthetic
  • An analytic language is one that uses very few
    bound morphemes, such as are seen in English
    prefixes and suffixes (refill and slowly) and in
    the inflections (grammatical endings) of English
    nouns and verbs (boxes, talking, talked).

71
Synthetic languages
  • A synthetic language, by contrast, uses large
    numbers of bound morphemes and often combines
    long strings of them to form a single word.
    Examples of highly synthetic languages are the
    Eskimo language.

72
The Romance languages
  • Latin is the direct descendent of four major
    languages Italian, Spanish, French and
    Portuguese. Each of these languages has developed
    its own morphology and syntax, but they all bear
    signs of their common origin in Latin. The most
    obvious resemblances are in vocabulary. Each
    language has undergone considerable changes in
    pronunciation, but the Latin origin of large
    numbers of words is quite evident.

73
Semitic languages
  • In addition to Latin, another major family of
    languages is the Semitic branch
  • At the time of the earliest written records this
    was already a family with many members
  • In Mesopotamia, modern Iraq, there was the East
    Semitic branch with Babylonian and Assyrian
  • Around the Mediterranean the West Semitic
    languages included Moabite, Phoenician, Aramaic
    and Hebrew
  • The east Semitic languages have died out and the
    most successful surviving language is Arabic, a
    south Semitic language
  • Also surviving are Syriac, Ethiopian and Hebrew.

74
Semitic languages
  • The Semitic languages are themselves an offspring
    of the Hamitic language family
  • The Coptic language is a descendent of the
    Hamitic language
  • It is now only used in liturgical services of the
    Coptic Orthodox Church of Egypt
  • Another member of the Hamitic family is the
    Berber language
  • The Berbers are a tribe of people who live in
    Morocco
  • They survived they Arab conquest of the 8th
    century and still remain a distinct race to this
    day.

75
Hebrew
  • Used only for religious purposes by practicing
    Jews, this language was revived with the creation
    of the modern state of Israel in 1948
  • Many people who emigrated there, including
    holocaust survivors, had a difficult time
    learning this language
  • This is why nearly everyone in Israel speaks
    perfect English
  • Aramaic, the native language of Jesus, has died
    out except for a village in Syria
  • Why didnt Jews speak Hebrew at that time? Prior
    to Roman control of Palestine, the Assyrian
    Empire had imposed Aramaic as the lingua franca
  • By Jesus time, the lingua franca was no longer
    Aramaic but Greek

76
Lingua franca
  • The original lingua franca was a tongue actually
    called Lingua Franca (or Sabir) that was employed
    for commerce in the Mediterranean area during the
    Middle Ages
  • Now extinct, it had Italian as its base with an
    admixture of words from Spanish, French, Greek,
    and Arabic
  • The designation "Lingua Franca" language of the
    Franks came about because the Arabs in the
    medieval period used to refer to Western
    Europeans in general as "Franks
  • Occasionally the term lingua franca is applied
    to a fully established formal language thus
    formerly it was said that French was the lingua
    franca of diplomacy

77
Alexander the Great
  • Alexander in around 320 B.C. had conquered lands
    stretching from Greece along the Mediterranean to
    Egypt and stretching all the way to modern
    Pakistan
  • When the Romans replaced Greece as the new world
    power, they kept Greek as the lingua franca
  • Keep in mind that Greek had never been the
    everyday language of the Holy Land
  • If you wanted to do business or practice law, you
    almost certainly had to speak Greek

78
Jesus
  • It has been documented that Jesus spoke three
    languages
  • We know that he spoke Aramaic as that is the
    language he conversed in
  • When he lectured at the temple, he would have had
    to have read the Torah in Hebrew
  • And we know that when he was tried by Pontius
    Pilot, they conversed in Greek
  • Pilot certainly would not have lowered himself to
    learn Aramaic
  • Pilot and the Roman soldiers would have spoken
    Latin and Greek

79
Pigdin
  • A pigdin is an auxiliary language used in the
    first place for the purposes of trade between
    groups that have no common language. It thus
    arises when two or more languages are in contrast
    and is a simplified form of the dominant one.
  • A pigdin lingua franca is a language which is not
    the native language of any of the people
    conversing in it. It is a simplified version of
    the language, often with words borrowed from
    other languages. If you are a businessman from
    China and you do business across southeast Asia,
    English will likely be your second language. To
    learn English is much easier than learning
    Japanese, Thai or Mandarin/Cantonese. In China,
    Mandarin and Cantonese are two distinct languages.

80
Other lingua franca
  • Aramaic was the lingua franca of the Persia
    empire from about 500 B.C. to about 330 B.C. as
    mentioned, Greek was the lingua franca of the
    Mediterranean world until the bastardized form of
    Italian known as Lingua Franca came about. With
    the rise of France, French became the lingua
    franca of diplomats. In East Africa, the lingua
    franca is Swahili, a member of the Bantu group of
    African languages. It is spoken by 30 million
    people, chiefly in Tanzania, Kenya, Congo
    (Kinshasa), Burundi, and Uganda. English is now
    the lingua franca of the world. There are
    regional lingua francas, such as Russian, German,
    Arabic, French and the aforementioned Swahili.

81
Creoles
  • It sometimes happens that a pidgin becomes the
    first language of a group. The language is then
    called a Creole. There are English-based Creoles
    in the Caribbean, for example in Barbados and
    Jamaica, on the North coast of South America
    (Guyana, Surinam) and even in the United States.
    Creoles probably developed in the Caribbean
    because of the mixing of populations caused by
    the slave trade. The slavers herded together
    speakers of many different West African
    languages. At the ports of embarkation, and on
    the slave ships, the captives probably
    communicated with one another in some kind of
    West African pidgin, which in the Caribbean
    plantations developed in Creoles.

82
Sino-Tibetan Family
  • Thai, Tibetan, Burmese and several dialects of
    Chinese come from the Sino-Tibetan family.
    Japanese does not come from this family it may
    be related to Korean

83
Contraction
  • There is a big difference between the number of
    known languages and the number of spoken
    languages
  • Aramaic, for example, is on the verge of
    extinction
  • When I say extinction I mean that no one speaks
    it
  • We are actually seeing the number of living
    languages disappear
  • Latin was only a number of related languages such
    as Umbrian and Oscan existed in Italy 2,000 years
    ago
  • But as the Romans conquered Italy, their
    language conquered too

84
Celtic
  • Celtic, once widely diffused over Europe, can be
    divided into three groups Gaulish, Britannic and
    Gaelic
  • Gaulish was spoken in France and northern Italy
    in the time of the Roman Republic and was spread
    abroad by Celtic military expeditions to central
    Europe and as far as Asia Minor
  • It died out during the early centuries of the
    Christian era and is known only from a few
    inscriptions and from names of people and places
    preserved in Latin texts
  • Britannic was the branch of Celtic spoken in most
    of Britain before the Anglo-Saxon invasions

85
English as lingua franca
  • English is used everywhere in the world
  • Instead of learning four foreign languages, a
    Japanese businessman will learn English
  • English is promoted by books, movies and music
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