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Lecture 12

ETHYMOLOGICAL STRATA

IN MODERN ENGLISH

List of principal questions:

        1. General characteristics

        2. native element in Modern English

2.1. Common Indo-European stratum

2.2. Common Germanic stratum

3. Foreign element in Modern English (borrowings)

3.1. Latin element

3.2. Scandinavian element

3.3. French element

4. Word-hybrids

5. Etymological doublets

6. Sources of the new words in modern English

Literature

  1. R.V. Reznik, T.C. Sorokina, I.V. Reznik A History of the English language. M., 2003.

  2. T.A. Rastorguyeva History of English. M., 1983.

  3. А.И. Смирницкий Лекции по истории английского языка. М., 2000.

  4. К. Бруннер История английского языка. Т.1 М., 2001.

  5. И. Чахоян, Л. Иванова, Т. Беляева. История английского языка. СПб., 1998.

  6. А.И. Смирницкий Древнеанглийский язык. М., 1955.

1. General characteristics

The English vocabulary of present-day English reflects as no other aspect of the language the many changes in the history of the people and various contacts which the English people had with many nations and the countries. The long and controversial history of the people is reflected in its vocabulary and especially in the number of loan words in it, different in origin and time of their entering the language and the circumstance under which the acquisition of the foreign element took place. So large is the number of foreign words in English that it might at first be supposed that the vocabulary has lost its Germanic nature.

However, the functional role of the native element: the nations expressed by native words, their regularity and frequency of occurrence, lack of restrictions to their use in written and oral speech of different functional styles, proves that the Germanic element still holds a fundamental place, and the English vocabulary should be called Germanic.

2. Native element in Modern English

English native words form two etymological strata: the Common Indo-European stratum and the Common Germanic stratum.

2.1. Common indo-European stratum

The words forming this stratum are the oldest in the vocabulary. They existed thousands of years B.C., at the time when it was yet impossible to speak about separate Indo-European languages, as well as about various nations in Europe. Words of the Common Indo-European vocabulary have been inherited by many modern Indo-European languages, not only Germanic, which is often a possible proof of these words belonging to the Common Indo-European stratum. Compare:

English Latin Russian

mother mater мать

brother frater брат

night nox ночь

be fieri быть

stand stare стоять

two duo два

three tres три

ten decem десять

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