Categorii: Tot - christianity - french

realizată de BETTY ELIZABETH JUI�A QUILACHAMIN 2 ani în urmă

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Old English (450 - 1100 ad)

The evolution of the English language has been significantly influenced by historical events and cultural exchanges. Starting from Old English, which developed from the Germanic dialects of the Saxons, Angles, and Jutes, the language began to incorporate Latin terms due to the Roman occupation and the introduction of Christianity by St.

Old English (450 - 1100 ad)

Betty Juiña

of power, such as crown, castle, court, parliament, army, mansion, gown, beauty, banquet, art, poet, romance, duke, servant, peasant, traitor and governor

Middle English (1100 - circa 1500 ad)

The Canterbury Tales

Famous collection of stories
Give us an idea of what life was like in fourteenth century England.

Fifteenth to eighteenth

Great Vowl Shit
vowels shifted upwards
Sound change affecting the long vowels of English

1200

Middle English
fFrench
Old English
English was being spoken instead of written
England and France had split

1066 dc

Duke of Normandy William the Conqueror
brought his nobles

English language was considered vulgar tongue

Latin used for written

They spoke French, was the language of the court, administration and culture

Became king
invaded England

Saxon, Anglos and Jutes

Mixed their different Germanic dialects.

Forms Old English or Anglo-Saxon

Old English (450 - 1100 ad)

Written works

old English
Most famous

Beowulf

was written in Britain

878 ad

Got many Norse words into the language
sky, egg, cake, skin, leg, window (wind eye), husband, fellow, skill, anger, flat, odd, ugly, get, give, take, raise, call, die, they, their, them.
Vikings invaded the country
Being Scandinavian spoke Old Norse

597 ad

St.Augustine arrive
Introduction of Christianity
Into Saxon England brought Latin words came from the Greek

Church bishop, baptism, monk, eucharist an presbyter

Romans broughy Latin to Britain

win (wine), candel (candle), belt (belt), weall (wall)
Words passed for Roman merchants an soldiers

Three Germanic tribes came to British Islands

Were warlike and pushed out most of the original Celtic-speaking inhabitants from England
One group migrated to the Brittany Coast of France
Descendants still speak

Celtic Language of Breton today.