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  • This is the Indo-European language family.

  • It stretches from the north of India all the way to Western Europe.

  • Almost half of the global population speaks an Indo-European language and that includes you and me.

  • English is a Indo-European language, specifically part of the Germanic branch of the family, along with languages like German, Dutch and Swedish.

  • In the early fifth century, the Romans, who had ruled over England for over 400 years, withdrew their hold over the island, filling this vacuum.

  • A number of Germanic tribes from Denmark in the north of Germany ventured onto the island and slowly replaced the Celtic and Romano-British cultures that had been dominant in the area.

  • Celtic speakers became concentrated in Wales, Scotland and Cornwall.

  • While the area we now know as England became culturally Germanic.

  • The Germanic peoples in Britain, while from a number of separate tribes eventually developed a common cultural identity as Anglo Saxons.

  • And with these Anglo Saxons, our story truly begins.

  • The Anglo Saxons in their many kingdoms spoke a language we now call Old English.

  • Old English really sounds nothing like our modern language and is largely incomprehensible to us modern speakers.

  • Here's an example of the language from the epic poem, Beowulf.

  • Hwæt. We Gardena in geardagum, þeodcyninga, þrym gefrunon, hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon.

  • So I assume you understood none of that.

  • Not to worry. No modern English speaker would be able to understand.

  • It's so old and English has evolved so much that it may as well be a foreign language.

  • While not understandable today, half of our most commonly used words come from this Anglo Saxon tongue.

  • Words like water, child, ear, talk, and "the".

  • Basically, most short simple words come from this old English language.

  • Now, Old English was not a static language; no languages ever are.

  • But most of the major changes to the English language through its history came not from within but from without.

  • The first major influx of change to English came with the Viking invasions in the eighth century onward.

  • Norsemen from Norway and Denmark invaded the north of England and even set up a kingdom of their own called the Danelaw.

  • These Vikings spoke a language called Old Norse, which is the ancestor of the modern Scandinavian languages.

  • Its influence on English was mostly vocabulary with words like sky, bag, law, hit, and even "they" coming from Old Norse.

  • In 1066, William, the bastard later known as William the Conqueror, invaded England with his Norman army and at the battle of Hastings successfully conquered it.

  • These Normans now the ruling class of England spoke a dialect of Old French.

  • This Norman French came to be the language of the royal court.

  • While Old English continued to be the language of the peasantry.

  • After around 100 years of this, the two languages began to merge, creating what we call Middle English.

  • If you've ever wondered why English, a Germanic language, has so many cognates with romance languages like Spanish or French, this is why.

  • A whopping 30% or 10,000 English words are French in origin.

  • These words are most commonly seen in the spheres of law, religion and science.

  • This French connection is also why English has so many words that mean the same thing called synonyms.

  • If you look at an English dictionary, it is almost always much larger than a dictionary of another language.

  • The most famous example of these synonyms comes from the realm of food.

  • In English, we use two different words when referring to an animal and the meat that comes from said animal.

  • Words like pig, cow, and chicken are all Anglo-Saxon as the farmers who raised these animals were English speakers.

  • While pork, beef, and poultry are all Norman French because the elites who ate the fine food were French speakers.

  • With this influx of French words as well as a simplification of the grammar rules of Old English, Middle English is one step closer to the language we know today.

  • Still it is by and large incomprehensible to most English speakers.

  • Here is an example from the Canterbury Tales by Chaucer, the most famous Middle English writer.

  • Whan that Aprille, with his shoures soote. The droghte of March hath perced to the roote. And bathed every veyne in swich licóu, Of which vertú engendred is the flour.

  • In the 15th century, a phenomenon known as the Great Vowel Shift started occurring which propelled English into its early modern version.

  • This vowel shift affected almost all English pronunciation in quite dramatic ways.

  • We won't get too into the specifics because I don't want to get into complicated linguistics.

  • But basically, English long vowels like "oo" started becoming shorter dipthongs like "oh".

  • A dipthong, by the way, is basically a sound made of two vowels.

  • Also, there were many consonants that became unpronounced, which we now call silent letters.

  • A good example of this change is in the word "knife".

  • In middle English, it was pronounced /kneef/.

  • But after the vowel shift, the "k" became silent and the "e" turned to the diphthong "i".

  • As you can see, while the pronunciation of the word has changed, the spelling has not.

  • This is one of the major reasons why English spelling is so notoriously difficult.

  • So with this change over around 200 years, the English language landed in a place most of us will recognize.

  • A good example of what we call Early Modern English is the work of Shakespeare.

  • Two households, both alike in dignity (In fair Verona, where we lay our scene), From ancient grudge break to new mutiny, Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.

  • That was a small part of the prologue from Romeo and Juliet.

  • It is understandable, but the word choice is quite different from how Modern English speakers speak, making it sometimes difficult to comprehend entirely.

  • Beginning in the 16th century, the British started exploring and subsequently created an empire.

  • At its height in the 19th century, the British empire covered a quarter of the earth and had control over almost a quarter of the earth's inhabitants.

  • This spread of English, as well as the later industrial revolution transformed English even farther, mostly in the realm of vocabulary.

  • New words from English colonies, as well as new words for new technology, ballooned the English vocabulary into what it is today.

  • Also the spread of English created many English varieties.

  • Most prominently in North America, where English pronunciation froze in place.

  • The standard American accent, like my accent, is actually closer to the accent of Shakespeare than most modern British accents.

  • American English is particularly influential because of the success of American pop culture around the world.

  • English today is still evolving as much as it ever was with new words being added to dictionaries every year, as well as many old words falling out of use.

  • English grammar is also changing.

  • And it will continue to change, so much so that in a few hundred years our language will sound just as foreign to future English speakers as Chaucer does to us.

This is the Indo-European language family.

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