Title: A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
1A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
- Henry, M. (1990). Words Integrated decoding and
spelling instruction based on word origin and
word structure. Austin PRO-ED.
2Facts
- Over ____ million people speak English
(__________ the population of the world) - When we learn English, we are actually learning
____ languages- each with its own phonology and
structure. - HERES WHY!?
3Germanic Influence
- English is classified as a ____________ language
- However, less than ___ of the words are Germanic
- The _______, _________, and _________ came from
northern _________________ bringing their
language with them - Later, the ______________ (known as the Danes)
invaded the land and spoke a northern branch of
Germanic
4Germanic Words
- Relatively few in number
- Common, everyday words in the language
- Includes all words on the _______ list
- All words on any lists of the ___________________
__ are Germanic
5Features of Germanic Words
- Short because over time, the endings dropped off
- Most of our _____________ words are Germanic
- Examples the, but, cold, sit
- ___________________ words in the language
- Least ____________________
- Most difficult to ____________
- Examples they, could, was, write, old, most,
thought - ___________, ___________, and ____________________
_ of vowels are characteristics of the Germanic
strain of language
6Latin Words
- Over ___________ the words in the English
language are based on Latin - A handful of Latin words entered during the
language during the __________ era - Most of the Latin words came by way of
_____________ (a _______ language) - Ex. glamour
7Vikings
- Some of the _________ had settled in Northern
France (i.e., Normandy which means north men)
and adopted the French language - In ______, they invaded England
- For the next 300 years, no king of England (keep
in mind every English king was also king of
France at that time) spoke English but instead
spoke ___________ (the language of the _________
and ________________)
8Latin
- Later, __________ in England borrowed words
directly from Latin itself - _________________ (with its center in Rome)
adopted Latin for its services) - As Christianity spread over western Europe, the
people attending services learned Latin words - Latin was also the required language at _________
and _____________ - Ex. calculus
9Characteristics of Latin Words
- Consist of a _________, __________, and _______
- Examples pre dic tion, in somni a
- Seldom use vowel pairs
- Use ____________ or vowel ____________ for long
sound - Examples invade, denote
- Never uses sh for /sh/ instead, the sound is
spelled ti, ci, si, or xi - Examples invention, social, permission,
complexion
10Greek Words
- _________ of the English vocabulary is based on
Greek - Greek words came into the language from 2
sources - _______ (as every educated Roman knew Greek)
- Borrowed by ____________
11Characteristics of Greek Words
- Recognized by their spelling and structure
- Use ___ for /f/ (Example physics)
- Use ____ for /k/ (Example chemistry)
- Use ___ for /i/ (Example gym, type)
- Often consists of 2 elements joined by a
connecting ___ (Example hydrogen, photograph) - Scientists use Greek when they want a new word
for a __________ or _____________ - Examples neutron, electron, cardiogram
- Greek has become the language of _________
12GREEK
Specialized words used mostly in
science, though some (i.e., television) are common
ROMANCE
Technical, sophisticated words used
primarily in more formal settings such as
literature textbooks
ANGLO-SAXON
Common, everyday, down-to-earth words used
frequently in ordinary situations and found in
school primers
13More Influences
- Crusaders and the trade with medieval __________
brought words such as tea, sofa, and sherbet - From ______ calico, bungalow, jungle
- From _________ dingo, outback, kangaroo
- From __________ safari
14Move to the New World
- Foreign words flooded into the language
- The Dutch were among the first _________ which is
why we have so many Dutch words (Example cookie,
landscape, coleslaw) - French explorers who settled in ____________
added chowder, pumpkin, prairie, levee, and
others to the list - ____________________ contributed banana, cola,
goober, yam, gorilla, tote, and okra
15Influence of the Native Americans
- Place names of rivers, mountains, landmarks, and
names of over half the states - Can you think of some of these?
- Other native words include caribou, toboggan,
papoose, raccoon, tobacco
16Other Changes Cause New Words to Enter
- Potato famine (1845) brought ____________
immigrants - 1848 revolution caused Germans to settle in
______________ and the __________________ - After the American Civil War came the Spanish,
Italians, and Scandinavians - Czechs, Slovaks, and Poles followed
- Chinese were hired to build the ____________ (and
they remained) - Japanese settled on the _____________________
- Refugees from all over Europe fled from World War
II - Also, there followed a huge influx from Puerto
Rico, China, - Hong Kong, Korea, Thailand
17Anglo-Saxon Layer of Language
- Beginning readers start out reading words from
the Anglo-Saxon base of language - _________________ used short words typical in
early readers - __________ are also of Anglo-Saxon origin
- In addition, prefixes and suffixes are added but
many of the Anglo-Saxon prefixes are __________
(forget, without, became, overlook, unhappy,
understand, inside, befriend) - Anglo-Saxon suffixes ed, er, ing, ly, s (es),
able, hood, ful, less, ness, ship, ish)
18Anglo-Saxon Letter-Sound Correspondences
CONSONANTS CONSONANTS CONSONANTS
Single Blends Diagraphs
b, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, p, q, r, s, t, v, w, x, y, z bl, cl, fl, gl, pl, sl br, cr, dr, fr, gr, pr, tr sc, sk, sl, sp, st, sw Final ft, lk, lt, mp, nd ch, sh th wh chat ship this when thin (-ck, -tch, -dge, -ng)
VOWELS VOWELS VOWELS
Single Letter (Short/Long) -r -l Controlled Diagraphs
cap - cape pet - Pete pinning - pining rob - robe cutter cuter (y) er, ir, ur ar, or arr, err all al 1 sound ee oy, oi oa ai, ay aw, au 2 sounds ea, ow, ou, ie, ei, ew
19Latin Layer of Language
- Students encounter these words in ____rd grade
- Knowledge of consonants vowels transfers
directly to these words - None of the complex Anglo-Saxon digraphs are
included - _______________ sound is the most notable feature
(unaccented vowel sound found in unaccented
syllables) Letter-sound correspondences are
otherwise the same as Anglo-Saxon - machine, soda, ahead, about, magazine
20Latin Layer
- Root words usually stressed contain the major
meaning of the word - spect, rupt, vis, aud, vent, flect, script,
gress, dict, tract, lit, duct, struct, pend, ped - Prefixes pre, re, bi, pro, mid, sub, dis, inter,
intro, intra, il, extra, per, ultra, trans - Many prefixes have the schwa sound
- aggressive, appearance, connect, collect, attach
- Vowel diagraphs in the suffixes are ALL
pronounced as schwas (nation, precious, omission)
initial consonants in the suffixes, followed by
i, are pronounced as /sh/
21Common Latin Prefixes
de- (from, away) re- (back, again) bi- (two) tri- (three) pre- (before) pro- (before, forward) co- (together, with) dis- (separation, undo) im- (in, not) sub- (under) ex- (out) trans- (across) mis- (wrong, bad) con- (together, with) in- (in, not) non- (not)
22Latin Suffixes
- -t(ure)
- -tion
- -sion
- -cian
- -tious
- -tial
- -cial
- -cious
- -ist (noun, person)
- -ive
- -age
- -ant
- -or (noun)
- -ar (adjective)
- -ible
- -ary
- -ize
- -ance
23Latin Roots
- cred (to believe)
- duc, duce, duct (to lead)
- pel, puls (to drive, push)
- pend (to hang)
- fac, fact (to make, do)
- vert, vers (to turn)
- jac, jec, ject (to throw, lie)
- rupt (to break, to burst)
- port (to carry)
- form (to shape)
- tract (to pull)
- scrib, script (to write)
- spec, spect (to see, watch)
- stru, struct (to build)
- dic, dict (to say, tell)
- flect, flex (to bend)
- mit, miss (to send)
24Greek Layer of Language
- Same letter-sound correspondences as those in
Anglo-Saxon words, but adds 3 important patterns
ph for /f/, ch for /k/, and the use of y as a
long vowel /i/ or short vowel /i/ (i.e., medial
vowel) - Usually specialized words in _________, though
some are ________ (___________) - Often contain silent _ (pneumonia, pseudonym)
- _______ as in mnemonics
25Greek Combining Forms
- Not called prefixes and suffixes but
___________________ since there are usually 2
parts of equal stress and importance
26Greek Combining Forms
- BEGINNING
- auto self
- phono sound
- photo light
- hydro water
- tele distance
- micro small
- therm heat
- biblio, hyper, chron, chrom, arch, phys, pysch,
peri, bi, semi, hemi, mono, meta, mega, metro,
philo, soph, theo, techni
- ENDING
- graph, gram written/drawn
- meter measure
- ology study
- scope watch, see
- sphere, crat, cracy, polis
27Syllable Division Rules
- Anglo-Saxon VC/CV V/CV, VC/V VC/CCV (consonant
l-e) are common - Latin Same as Anglo-Saxon but the prefixes and
suffixes often consist of syllables based on
these patterns (i ble, - in tro)
- Greek Same as Anglo-Saxon (many v/cv such as
hyper, vc/v such as hemi, also, v/cc such as
hydro)
28Why Students Need This Information
- Students use their knowledge to decode unfamiliar
words. - Teach students this process
- See if you can identify the language origin.
- Look for the morpheme units Anglo-Saxon or Latin
prefixes, roots, suffixes. Greek combining forms,
or single words making up Anglo-Saxon compound
words. - If you cant find a morpheme, or if you find
morphemes but still cant read the word, break
the word into syllables using the common syllable
division options. - If syllable division doesnt work, or works for
only part of the work, use letter-sound
correspondences.