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Do You Know What You're Writing? The Origin of the English Language in 900 Words


For as long as I can remember (which, admittedly, isn't that long) I have been interested in words and language. As a writer it's important to me to understand (at least in part) where the words come from.

 English is a fascinating language. Its words are rich in both history and cultural content. But how did these words, this language, come to be? What are these scrawlings we writers write?

 In this article we're going to take a look at a little history and a few entertaining resources too! I've kept it as short as I could, and though it did tempt me to become a 5000-word essay I steadfastly resisted ;)

 1. Old English

 No, not those in the twilight of their lives. This is the name given to the dialects spoken in England up until about AD 1100.

 Where did it all begin? Well, I'm not going back all the way. We'll start, for our purposes, during the 5th-6th Century AD.

 Three tribes speaking the Western Germanic language decided that they would come settle in England. These we know as the Jutes, Angles and Saxons.
 They pushed the native celts into Scotland, Wales and Cornwall and established settlements across England. Their language divided into four dialects: Northumbrian (spoken in northern England), Mercian (the Midlands), Kentish (the south- east), and West Saxon (south and west).
 These dialects we collectively call Old English.

 2. Old Norse

 Around AD 850 the North Germanic tribes decided to start invading the land (mostly in the north) and thus Old Norse started to permeate the language. It was King Alfred the Great who pushed the Danish invaders back but they still held the north of England and so that's where the main Old Norse infusion occurred, but it spread and the two mixed - often leaving two words with the same meaning intact; which means, today, your thesaurus has a lot more entries than it otherwise would have had! ;) But many more synonyms were to be added...

 3. Anglo-Norman

 Yes, that strange Norse-French hybrid that is used to describe all those heraldic terms. This language dominated England after the successful invasion made by William of Normandy in 1066. The Normans (the word comes from 'Norse man') were actually of Western Germanic stock but had settled in France.
 England became dominated by this French language and Old English (which also became known as Anglo-Saxon in Alfred's time) went underground. Not only that but the Normans brought with them the Latin script which was used in ecclesiastical and legal matters. It was to be another 300 years before English became the language of the rulers again,

 Middle English (Chaucer), Modern English (Shakespeare) and Late Modern English (today!) followed.

 Summary

 English, influenced heavily by Old English, Old Norse, the Norman French and Latin has become a rich and multi-synonymed language. Personally I wouldn't write or speak another! Well, actually I can't do either anyway ;)
 I thought I'd end this article by providing you with some interesting linguistic facts as well as a couple of great links.

 Interesting Linguistic Facts

 1. The last native Cornish speaker died in 1777. The dead language of Cornish (though it is being revived) was spoken in the far southwestern extremity of England (Cornwall).
 2. Although only a sixth of known Old English words form the origins of today's English, a full half of today's most- commonly-used words are from Old English. Read that again ;)
 3. The modern-day English counties of Sussex and Essex take their name origins from 'South Saxonland' and 'East Saxonland' respectively; Wessex ('West Saxonland') no longer exists but was the homeland of King Alfred the Great.
 4. The influence of the Norman French 'good life' as rulers can be seen in the language. For instance, many animals (such as deer, pig, sheep, chicken) retain their Anglo- Saxon (Old English) names whilst the 'meat for the table' employs the French ('venaison', 'porc', 'mouton', 'poulet').
 5. It was largely the blending of Anglo-saxon and French to bring about multiple synonyms that today gives English the largest vocabulary of all languages. Examples include sweat/perspiration, dead/deceased, want/desire, ad inf! (oh, ad. inf. is Latin ;) )
 6. It is thought that the mispronunciation of the Anglo-Saxon letter, 'edh' (ð) (likely pronounced as th as in 'the') was responsible for the emergence of the word 'Ye' as in 'Ye Olde Worlde...' It should probably be 'the' not 'ye'.

 Miscellaneous

 For those who know HTML, you can use the three weird-looking characters from the Anglo-Saxon alphabet (eth, thorn and the ae/AE ligature) by prefixing these with ampersands, and ending with semi-colons: eth, thorn, aelig, AElig (the last two representing the lowercase and uppercase ae ligature respectively).
 These display as in the following first four lines from Beowulf:

 Hwæt! We Gardena in geardagum,
þeodcyninga, þrym gefrunon,
hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon.
 Or see them here and learn some basic phrases to impress your friends ;)
 wes þu hal - hello (be thou hale?)
 hu gæþ hit - how are you? (how goes it?)
 hit gæþ god - I'm well (it goes good)
 ic þancie þe - I thank you

 You can see and hear some Old English by visiting the link below (I found some readings from the well-known Old English epic, Beowulf!)

  rel=nofollow http://www.faculty.virginia.edu/OldEnglish/Beowulf.Readings/Beowulf.Readings.html

 I hope you feel a little better now you know what you're writing ;)

Darren Andrews is a writer and researcher, he runs [http://www.freelanguagecoursesnow.com] where you can find out more about Anglo-Saxon, sign up for free language courses, get a special report on how to write a book fast, and a plethora of other free courses.

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