Context👨💻 Flashcards
Context of a recount (child language written)
- Likely to be told what to include by a teacher
- Teacher may have put key words on the board (could link to jargon)
- Shows reader awareness as the child is using context bound language
Caxton’s printing press in the 15th century🕰
- Encouraged a unified spelling as it facilitated mass printing
- HOWEVER, in the Early Modern English period, individual printers established their own conventions - as did writers - so uniformity was not deemed important at first
Printing press🕰
- Printers wanted to fit words neatly on a line, so began to drop the terminal ‘e’
- Other times, they added letters because they got paid by the number of letters produced
Ligatures🕰
- The linking of two graphemes
- Was once common in printing but is now becoming less common
- The ampersand (&) developed from a ligature in which the Latin letters e and t were combined
Consonant clusters🕰
In words like ‘knee’ and ‘gnaw’ consonant clusters reduced to the /n/ phoneme, but the spelling remained
Long S🕰
- Lost in the late modern English period
* Used initially and medially but short s used at end
Silent letters🕰
Often have Greek etymology, e.g. psychology
U and V graphemes🕰
Were once interchangeable until 1630
Pre and pro🕰
Latin affixes
French influence🕰
- Some of the earliest standardisation was with the French after the Norman invasion in the 11th century
- French scribes began to include their own spelling patterns
- E.g. ‘qu’ was once written as ‘cw’ - cwen
Double consonants🕰
Middle English developments included the use of double consonants to show that the vowel before this was short, such as ‘dinner’ compared to ‘diner’
Ck ending🕰
- Some spellings have simplified with words like ‘physick’ losing its final k
- There isn’t consistency - some other words have retained their ck ending just involving the velar plosive /k/, such as the word ‘sick’
Silent b and l🕰
•Silent, although still in the written word
•b of thumb
•l in walk
-not all follow this, e.g. milk and sulk
The letter c🕰
- The letter c was used in French to spell an /s/ sound in many loanwords of Latin etymology
- The letter c in the Roman writing system represented a /k/
Why might ‘he’ as a gender neutral term have declined in use by the 20th century?🕰
The feminist movements of the 1960s/70s