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The formation of the national E language. The London dialect.

The formation of the national literary English covers the Early NE period.

Factors that influenced:

a. The unification of the country and the progress of the culture;

b. Increased foreign contacts influenced the grouth of the vocabulary.

The Universities of Oxford and Cambridge.

Latin invention of printing → spreading of written form of English.

Early NE → Renaissance: Shakespeare, Thomas More. The end of the 17th cent. – books and dictionaries.

In the18th cent the speech of educated people differed from that of common people: 1) pronunciation; 2) choice of words; 3) grammar.

By the end of the 18th cent the speech may be regarded as completed for new , it possessed both a written and spoken standart.

The history of London dialect reveals the sources of literary language in late ME. The London dialect fundamentally East Saxon.

ME division → LD belonged to the S. Western dial. group.

12-13th S. West. districts – “Black Death” → new arrivals from the East Midland → London dialect became more Anglian.

Early Middle English: The earliest samples of Early ME prose are the new entries made in the Anglo-Saxon chronicles (1122) known as Peterborough chronicle, Poem morale (Moral ode) – Kentish dialect, Ormulum – North-East Midland dialect, Ancrene Riwle – South-Western dialect.

The dialect division which evolved in Early ME was on the whole preserved in later periods. In the 14th, 15th cent there were the same grouping of local dialects.

1. Southern group → Kentish

→ South-West dialect

2. Midland group → East Midland

→ West Midland

3. Northern group

French was ousted from official spheres and from the sphere of writing.

The Hourishing of literature which makes the second half of the 14cent testifies to the complete reestablishment of English as the language of writing. It was “the age of Chaucer”, the greatest author of this period. “Canterbury tales

Chaucer was the most outstanding figure of the 14th cent. He had the most varied experience as student, official member of Parliament. His later works were imitative of other authors. He never wrote in any other language than English. The culmination of his work as a poet is his unfinished collection of stories “The Canterbury tales”. He presented in the pilgrims a gallery of life-like portraits taken from all works of life. Chaucer’s literature language based on the mixed London dialect is known as classical ME, in the 15-16th cent it became the basic of the national literary Engl language.

ME 12-15th:

PRINCIPAL OE AND ME WRITTEN RECORDS

Alphabets

The first Old English written records are considered to be the runic inscriptions.To make these inscriptions people used the Runes/the Runic Alphabet – the first original Germanic Alphabet.

Runes/Runic Alphabet:

· appeared in the 3rd – 4th c. A.D.;

· the word “rune” meant “secret, mystery”;

· each symbol indicated a separate sound (one symbol = one sound);



· the symbols were angular due to the fact that they had to be carved on hard materials;

· the number of symbols: GB – 28-33; on the continent – 16-24).

Best known Runic Inscriptions:

1. Franks Casket – a box with 4 sides made of whale bone, each side contained a picture in the centre and runic inscriptions around the picture that told the story of the whale bone in alliterative verse.

2. Ruthwell Cross –was found near thevillage of Ruthwell, Dumfriesshire, it is a 15 feet tall stone cross ornamented in all sides with runic inscriptions that are actually a passage from a religious poem “The Dream of the Rood”.


Date: 2015-12-11; view: 1688


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