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Native English vocabulary

3.2.1. Anglo-Saxon element in English

The original stock of the English vocabulary is made up of Anglo-Saxon element and English proper element, which was partially influenced by Celtic.

Anglo-Saxon words appeared in the language around the 5th century A.D., when the Germanic invaders migrated to the British Isles. These are the words of high frequency, like the articles, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, auxiliaries and modal verbs (shall, will, can, may, must), as well as verbs and nouns, denoting everyday objects and phenomena, such as the parts of the human body (arm, foot, head, heart, chest, bone, eye, ear), domestic life (house, home, door, floor), animals (dog, hound, sheep, swine, cow, hen, fish, goat), the natural landscape (cliff, hill, field, hedge, meadow, wood), the calendar (day, month, sun, moon, year), some common adjectives (black, dark, long, good, white, wide), and common verbs (become, do, eat, fly, go, help, kiss, live, love, see, sell, send, think) (see Crystal 1995;124).

As it is obviously seen from the above, the Anglo-Saxon words are short and concise root words, which are highly frequent in both literal and colloquial discourse, they make up the core of the language vocabulary.

There is a strong tendency, noticed by B. Bryson, to keep the Anglo-Saxon noun but to adopt a foreign one for the adjectival form. Thus, figurers are not figurish; they are digital. Eyes are not eyeish, they are ocular. “English is unique in this tendency to marry a native noun to an adopted adjective. Among other such pairs are mouth/oral, mind/mental, book/literary, water/aquatic, house/domestic, moon/lunar, sun/solar, town/urban” (See B. Bryson, p.68).

The bulk of the Old English word stock has been preserved, although some items have passed out of existence. The Anglo-Saxon element is estimated to make about 30% of the English vocabulary. The semantic and word building ability as well as frequency value and collocability of these words is great and they make up a core part of the language vocabulary.

 


Date: 2015-04-20; view: 2622


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