Dialects Caxton & Printing Emergence of a Standard

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MIDDLE ENGLISH PERIOD
Advertisements

Fifth Lecture 1- ME Pronunciation. 2- ME Grammar. 3- The Rise of Standard English.
Introduction to Old and Middle English: Part II Chaucer‘s time and life April 21, 2006 Andreas H. Jucker.
General characteristics.  the beginning of a new social and linguistic era  Middle English runs from the beginning of the 12 th century until.
Ch. 5 Language Key Issue 1: Where are English-Language Speakers Distributed? Origin and diffusion of English Dialects of English.
The history of English language
History of the English Language
The history of the English language
Indo-European Language Families
Happy New Year! On your desks: Textbook Pen Highlighter
From 1066 on... History and Literature! pp. 50,51,52,53,54.
Linguistic Atlas of Late Medieval English By Lauren Crowne.
Why do linguists believe in language families? Cognates – if languages have words in common (or words closely related to one another), linguists believe.
Introduction to Old and Middle English: Part II Syntax, Great Vowel Shift, Standardisation May 12, 2006 Andreas H. Jucker.
5 EVENTS THAT SHAPED THE HISTORY OF ENGLISH According to Philip Durkin, Principal Etymologist at the Oxford English Dictionary.
Five Events that Shaped the History of English
Historical Linguistics From Old English to Middle English.
Polo Vergara Ernesto & Colin Juan
General Overview of History of English
Chaucer (c ) Geoffrey Chaucer is considered to be England’s first great literary genius. Copyright Peter S. Willis.
Anglo Saxon and middle English literature. Characterisations of Middle English literature `In the 12th century, a new form of English now known as Middle.
Introduction to The Canterbury Tales Accelerated/Honors 12.
Modern English Period(1500-present)
The Birth of Modern English Renaissance Language Renaissance Language.
During this unit of study, we will analyze the deep history of the English language. We will also take a look at some of the literature that symbolizes.
Regional and Social Dialects
The Lord’s Prayer Old EnglishEnglish Fæder ure þuþe eart on heofonum si þin nama gehalgod tobecume þin rice gewurþe þin willa on eorðan swa swa on heofonum.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight A brief overview of the poem’s historical context or What happens in England between Beowulf and Sir Gawain.
Formation of New Words Middle English Period. Formation of New Words: Compounding Mostly nouns and adjectives Nouns: Noun + noun cheesecake, toadstool,
The Anglo-Norman Period (1066 ~ 1485)
CHAPTER 5 LANGUAGE.  Language: A system of communication through speech  Literary Tradition: a system of written communication  Common in many languages.
WILLIAM CAXTON AND THE PRINTING PRESS Unit 2: English Language.
A Brief and Simplified Overview
The Early Modern English Early Modern English is the stage of the English language used from about the end of the Middle English period (the latter half.
MIDDLE ENGLISH. INTRODUCTION For three centuries, there was no single form of English recognized as a norm, and people wrote in the language of their.
Chapter 5: Language Section 5-1. Language Quiz 1) How many distinct languages are in the world today? A) about 100 B) between 500 – 1000 C) between 2000.
Early Modern English Period end of the 15 th – beginning of the18th century The formation of the National English Language.
History of English BranchesFamous Names Languages and Words Important Events Miscellane ous
Chapter 5 Language. French Road Signs, Québec Language Language is: a system of communication through speech & a collection of symbols that a group of.
Week 5 Middle English 2 Prologue to the Wife of Bath's Tale from Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales," illuminated manuscript on vellum. England,
The history of the English language © Page 1 of 15 Use the powerpoint to make notes about the poem that you have in your passport.
Middle English Influences and Decline of English  Norman Invasion (1066)  Increase in French as main spoken language  The influence of the.
Language during Geoffrey Chaucer’s Time Period
156. Changing Conditions in The Modern Period 157
Mr. Larbi 1 Chapter 4 : MODERNITY & ENGLISH as a National Language Chapter 4 : MODERNITY & ENGLISH as a National Language.
CHAPTER 5 SECTION 1 LANGUAGE Unit III. Where are English-Language speakers distributed ?
Old English Letters. Historians say that there is not much difference between the language used in Old English compared to the English that we speak today.
1 MODERNITY AND ENGLISH AS A NATIONAL LANGUAGE Chapter 4.
1 ENGLISH MANUSCRIPTS U210A/B1/Ch 2. 2 ENGLISH MANUSCRIPTS Introduction:  Focus: the historical dimensions of the linguistic forms of English.  The.
The evolution of the English language
History of the English Language
ENGLISH LANGUAGE – 2° YEAR A HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE Annalisa Federici, Ph.D. Textbook: J. Culpeper, History of English, Routledge (unit.
Language – What Should I Say? ___________ – set of mutually intelligible sounds and symbols that are used for communication. Many languages also have literary.
The Making of Middle English Letters and Literature
History of the English Language
History of the English Language
Middle English Dialects and The Great Vowel Shift
Dialects and pronunciation
The history of the English language
ENGLISH LANGUAGE – 2° YEAR A HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
Middle English Dialects
A Brief History of the English Language
Background to English Language
The Renaissance “It had long since come to my attention that people of accomplishment rarely sat back and let things happen to them. They went.
MIDDLE ENGLISH PERIOD
Le due culture The English language had almost no prestige abroad at the beginning of the sixteenth century.  One of the earliest sixteenth-century works.
The history of the English language
The history of the English language
Science and the English Language
Presentation transcript:

Dialects Caxton & Printing Emergence of a Standard Middle English Dialects Caxton & Printing Emergence of a Standard

Middle English Dialects

Studying Middle English Dialects Linguistic Atlas of Late Middle English (1350-1450) • late time period means lots of texts • according to the atlas, almost any Middle English written before 1430 considered “dialectal” by definition Some regions have more written documents than others Northern/North Midland English: very few sources before 1350 Southern England: lots of material from 14th century on

Dot Maps Dot maps show where in an area (county, region, etc.) a certain spelling/pronunciation is used Each dot map displays the distribution of the set of forms specified in the map’s caption Places where each form has been found represented by black dots 3 dot sizes: large, medium, small (reflecting how dominant the particular form is in the given place) Lots of statistical variation

ME Dialects: The Basics (heavily generalized!) Northern Much Norse settlement, reconquest by English in early 10th century - all-Norse settlements learned English quickly, badly Rapid development, decay of inflections Þey, þem, þeir (with y for þ, and spelling variants) Bot fals anticristes he sall yaim call (cf. Southern hy, hem, her) Verbs in -es, not -eþ (sing.), -en (plur.) He loves, þey loven Present participle in -ande, -ende (goande, not going) Brut (historical poem)

ME Dialects: The Basics (cont’d) East and West Midlands -en in plural verbs They loven Þey, hem, here in 3rd pers. plural He shal hem calle Þei lyuen in falce trouþe West Midland Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, Piers Plowman East Midland Geoffrey Chaucer, John Gower

ME Dialects: The Basics (cont’d) Southern Persistence of ʒ He schal saye thanne ryʒt to cristene man Heo/ho for she Hy, hem, here in 3rd person plur. Voicing of fricatives For > vor Seggen pronounced /zɛǰən/ -eþ in most verbs (sg./plur.) The Owl and the Nightingale (allegorical poem) Ancrene Riwle (rule for anchoresses)

ME Dialects: The Basics (cont’d) Kentish (Southeastern) Similar to Southern, with some vowel differences Hy,hem, here in 3rd person plur. Voiced fricatives (vor) No major literary texts

Rise of London Standard (14th-15th centuries) written standard, spoken variation, but not complete variation (like today) But in the real world, variation in both written and spoken language East Midland dialect gradually merged with London

Reasons for Rise of London Standard (i) Midland dialects: middle position between North and South Southern dialect very conservative (slow to change), Northern very radical (quick to change) – Midlands in between - workable compromise (ii)East Midlands: largest, most populous area – fertile, prosperous agricultural area - larger, wealthier population - politically important throughout the Middle Ages and afterwards (iii)Influence of Oxford and Cambridge (14th century): role of monasteries decreasing, two universities rapidly developing – Cambridge, at least, would support East Midlands dialect

Reasons for Rise of London Standard (cont’d) role of Chaucer - popular in his day, popular throughout 15th century • but, slightly more conservative/ Southern than London dialect

Reasons for Rise of London Standard (cont’d) (v) role of London as capital city • political and commercial center of England • seat of royal court, law courts, social and intellectual activity • true in other languages: Parisian French, Castilian Spanish (Madrid) • much movement of people into and out of the city: government officials go out on business, others go to London on business • local speeches mixed together to form a new combination – visitors take away the influence of London speech - standard spreads • began as a Southern dialect, ended up more or less East Midlands

Reasons for Rise of London Standard (cont’d) (vi) Chancery (government writing office) • by c. 1450, had developed a consistent variety of London English • language of official use, influenced other writing

Reasons for Rise of London Standard (cont’d) (vii) Caxton & Printing • first printer in English • “I was born & lerned myn Englissh in Kente in the Weeld, where I doubte not is spoken as brode and rude Englissh as is in ony place of Englond.”

Caxton/Printing (cont’d) Merchant/diplomat learned printing on the Continent introduced the press into England c. 1476, near Westminster Abbey printed Chaucer, Gower, Lydgate, Malory, translated bestsellers from France and Burgundy

Caxton’s Spellings not easy for a writer and printer in 15th century to choose a version of English that would be acceptable to all readers Caxton describes difficulties when he printed English for the first time - he found he had used ‘strange terms’ (see printed handout) for commercial reasons, he used the spelling of the London/East Midlands dialect

Caxton and Standardization For commercial reasons, Caxton and other printers settled for London English - privileging a dialect Used some foreign typesetters - confused by English spelling (silent -e or not? Often line length) - see handout Dutch influence: ghost, ghesse (guess) Caxton modernized orthography: eliminated ʒ, þ, ð Eventually, printing helped to fix the language on the page - sometimes forced a consensus, accounting for some oddities of English spelling: right, riht, rite, richt

Effects of Print printing made books available at a relatively low price - increased demand for books and literacy, especially among middle and lower classes In general, the middle classes didn’t have a classical education - wanted books in English rather than Latin or French To make Greek and Latin classics available to people who only knew English, they were translated into English translations led to the introduction of thousands of loanwords from Latin and Greek into English

Effects of Translation 15th c. - lots of translations, “half-chewed Latin” Hale sterne superne! Hale, in eterne stars on high In God’s sight to schyne! Lucerne in derne, for to discerne lamp Be glory and grace devyne; Hodiern, modern, sempitern. Present,current,eternal William Dunbar (ca. 1460- 1520), Hymn to the Blessed Virgin

Rise of London Standard Printed books made London English current and durable By 16th c. (EMnE), London English was prescribed: Ye shall therefore take the usuall speach of the Court, and that of London and the shires lying about London with lx. myles, and not much above. Anon. (attributed to Puttenham) The Arte of English Poesie (1589) Complete uniformity never attained, even in vocabulary (let alone accent) - dialects even today