Language Era’s Flashcards
Periods of English
Old English (OE) 449-1100
Middle English (ME) 1100-1500
Early Modern English (EME) 1500-1800
Late Modern English (LME) 1800-Present Day
Present Day English (PDE) now
English language context
English language is Germanic: Norway, Sweden, Germany
Old English words are said to be of muscular quality, short, direct, forceful
Language contact
Process of language change whereby multiple language come into social contact and have linguistic influence on each other
Disglossia
Term used mostly in socialinguistics, referring to a situation where two very different varieties of language exist alongside each other, each holding a distinct social function.
EME Printing, dictionaries and grammar
- 1476 William Caxton’s printing press was established in London
Caxton published using the dialect, grammar and spelling system of the capital city. This helped promote the idea of “standard English” - a benchmark to which all other varieties of English were compared.
EME Dictionaries
- Helped standardise English.
- 1755 Samuel Johnson published his Dictionary of the English Language consisting of 40,000 detailed entries. Johnson set out to fix what he saw as a chaotic and untidy language. He eventually realised language was always changing, his role was to describe rather than prescribe language.
EME Literature
- 16th - 18th centuries is known as the ‘golden age’ of English Literature.
- Writers John Donne, John Milton and William Shakespeare all chose to use English rather than Latin/French which had been the language of the social elite/ educated classes.
- English took on an increased sense of gravitas and social status.
- Vocabulary size increased as writers created new word forms and experimented with word meaning.
- Increase in publications helped standardise the English language.
EME Grammars
- 1762 Robert Lowth based rules for English on Latin in ‘A Short Introduction to English Grammar’
- Around 200 grammars were published in the EME era, most of which were highly prescriptive, arguing for a ‘correct way of using English and presenting themselves almost as a linguistic manual.
- The rise of prescriptivism was accentuated by people such as Jonathon Swift and John Dryden who called for the creation of an ‘English Academy’ a group to decide on correct usage and protect the English language.
Standardisation
Process under which a language develops a standard ‘prestige’ variety.
LME Industrial Revolution