Informer: English product of intermingling of different peoples, languages
Published 9:43 am Monday, December 26, 2011
EDITOR’S NOTE: Informer editor Andrew Perzo is on vacation and will return Jan. 1. Today’s column features a question and answer that first appeared in 2006.
When did the English language get started?
Languages don’t just start. They evolve over time, acquiring, modifying and shedding words as speakers of different dialects — i.e., versions of the same tongue — intermingle and come into contact with speakers of other languages.
English, a Germanic language, arose sometime after the fifth century, when several groups of Northern European peoples settled on the eastern and southern sides of Britain, driving the native Celtic peoples westward.
Members of these groups — called the Angles, the Saxons and the Jutes — spoke a variety of dialects, among themselves and likely among members of the other groups, linguistics professor David Crystal writes in “The Stories of English.”
“It is not possible to say how intelligible the Angles, Saxons and Jutes found each other,” he writes.
“Probably their dialects would have been mutually comprehensible, for the most part, though with islands of difficulty due to distinctive local pronunciations and vocabulary.”
The language at this stage in its development — we call it Old English — bore little resemblance to modern English in pronunciation and spelling. Old English used several letters not found in the Latin alphabet, most notably “eth” and “thorn.”
The eth resembled a “d” with a curved stem marked by a crossbar. Thorn looked like a “p” with a stem that rises above the letter as well as below.
The first corresponded with the “th” sound in the word “this”; the second was the equivalent of the “th” in “thin.”
The following is a list of Old English words — all without any typographically tricky characters — and their modern versions, as listed on a University of Calgary website:
andswaru — answer
biddan — to ask
biscop — bishop
kyning — king
nim — take
ramm — ram
bude — lived
longe — long
buton — except
betwenan — between
axian — to ask
betweox — betwixt
fandian — to test
eft — again
fyr — fire
weofod — altar
brohton — brought
gnornian — mourn
fisc — fish
bricg — bridge
secg — man
boc — book
weorc — work
• Online: www.ucalgary.ca/UofC/eduweb/engl401.
The Informer answers questions from readers each Sunday, Monday and Wednesday. It is researched and written by Andrew Perzo, an American Press staff writer. To ask a question, call 494-4098, press 5 and leave voice mail, or email informer@americanpress.com.