
- •Revision lecture 1
- •Analytical formations in the English language
- •Future tense analytical formations
- •Passive constructions development
- •Perfect constructions.
- •Continuous forms development
- •But the last structure didn’t denote the process, it was used to show imperfection. This structure also had the meaning of the action beginning & intensity and also denoted the state.
- •6) Analytial forms with the verb “do”.
- •7) Analytical forms of the Subjunctive mood.
- •8) Analytical forms of the Infinitive.
- •9) Analytical forms of Participles.
- •Revision lecture 2
- •§ 2. Eme & lme dialecte
- •Lme dialects
- •Ene period (1475 – 1660)
- •Dialectical division in England (19th – 20th century)
- •Geographical Expansion of the English language outside England.
- •Revision lecture 3
- •1.1. Etymological analysis.
- •B atcombe
- •Outside of place-names borrowings from Celtic were very few no more than a dozen.
- •Word – formation in oe According to the morphological structure all oe words are divided into 3 groups: (1) simple (root-words) ● land, sinƺan, ƺod (land, sing, good)
- •Ways of word formation
- •W ord formation in oe
- •Scandinavian influence on the vocabulary (me)
- •French borrowings
- •Borrowings from contemporary languages in ne
- •Borrowings from classical languages
- •Word-formation history
§ 2. Eme & lme dialecte
E ME dialects: (from respective OE dialects):
The Southern group:
Kentish < OE Kentish
South-Western (from OE Saxon)
East-Saxon (wasn’t prominent untill LME period);
The group of Midland (Central) dialects < from OE Mercian dial.
West Midland (South-West & North-West)
East Midland (South-East & North East)
The Norhern group < from OE Northumbrian
the Yorksahire
the Lancashire
some other dialects, later known as Scottish.
Lme dialects
The Southern group (Kentish & S-W).
The Midland group
The Northern group
A few years before the Norman conquest the capital was transferred to London. The most important event in the LME linguistic situation was the rise of the London dialect as the prevailed written from of language. The London dialect. – East-Saxon group including Anglian & Saxon dialects
Ene period (1475 – 1660)
It was the period of the formation of the national literary English language. The national language embraces all the varieties of the language including dialects. The “nation literary language” applies to recognized written & spoken stardard forms of the language. It’s characterised by codified norms & rules of usage & functional stylistic differentiation.
The Modern period (19th – 20th)
S
tandard English (British English)
Written Standard Styles: Spoken Standard
(literary, official, newspaper, (colloquial varieties =
publicistic, scientific, prose) sub-standard forms of the language)
Scottish language (Scottish English)
Anglo-Irish language.
Dialectical division in England (19th – 20th century)
(regional & social)
The Southern dialect (East & West-Southern)
The Midland dialect (Eastern, Central Western).
The Northern dialect
Among the social dialect of particular interest is London’s Cockney (a form of oral speech used by the lower rank of Londoners throughout the NE period).
Geographical Expansion of the English language outside England.
Scottish English (9th century) on the basis of Northumbrian dialect. It’s the language of the Scottsh nation & has its own written standard.
Irish English (XIIth century). It’s the second state language together with the Gaelic language.
American English (16th century). It’s a national language of the USA being English in origin.
Canadian English (16th century). It’s one of the state languages to be differed a little from American English.
Australian English (18th century). It’s a language comprizing different city’s slangs an having some peculiar phonetic & grammar differences from the British language.
South-African English (19th century). It’s also on of the state languages.
Revision lecture 3
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ENGLISH VOCABULARY
§ 1. OE vocabulary.
§ 2. ME vocabulary.
§ 3. NE vocabulary.
§ 1. The OE vocabulary.