Important Dates for Language History

Description

A Levels English Language (Language Change) Flashcards on Important Dates for Language History, created by Hazel Meades on 04/09/2014.
Hazel Meades
Flashcards by Hazel Meades, updated more than 1 year ago
Hazel Meades
Created by Hazel Meades almost 10 years ago
25
0

Resource summary

Question Answer
1066 The Normans invaded, led by William the Conqueror. Norman French and English co-existed but following the invasion there was a French-speaking power bias apparent in court, the church and landowners.
1350 The black death had a huge impact on English. As the Latin and French speaking nobles died out they were replaced by barely literate peasants who often only spoke English.
1590 Shakespeare starts writing his plays, inventing new words and grammatical ideas.
1500-1600 The great vowel shift. Vowels went higher. We know it happened because of spelling.
1600 Period of cultural rebirth known as the Renaissance. This is also known as early modern English.
November 1620 The Mayflower brought the persecuted, puritan, English settlers to America where they built a "New England" settlement and were helped by Squanto.
1622 The Weekly News, the first English newspaper, is published in London.
18th century-present Late modern English developed. Ben Johnson is one writing of this period.
1721 Nathaniel Bailey's Universal Etymological dictionary.
1746 William Caxton set up his printing press, providing the roots for standardisation. Many Greek and Latin texts were translated into English.
1755 Samuel Johnson's dictionary was published. It took him 8 years to do with 6 assistants and was criticised for using archaic words, omitting words he didn't understand, omitting rude words, omitting trade terms and definitions were often inaccurate or biased.
1762 Robert Lowth's short Introduction to English Grammar and Lindley Murray's English Grammar
January 1788 Captain Arthur Phillips transported convicts to Australia.
1816 John Pickering compiles the first dictionary of Americanisms.
1870 Education Act meant that everyone had some form of compulsory access to education about English language.
1876 Alexander Bell invents the telephone.
1942 Friendly American soldiers came to Britain and contributed words such as: gizmo, gobbledegook, pin-up ect.
1958 Singapore made English the official language of business and government. This was after their independence.
March 2000 Pope's first visit to Israel. He addressed people in English.
5th-11th century Old English prevailed with examples of literature such as Beowulf.
11th-14th century Middle English prevailed with literature such as The Canterbury Tales. The language was influenced by French, old English and Latin.
15th-17th century Early modern English developed. Shakespeare was an important influence of this period.
18th century The birth and rise of the novel and an era of prescriptivism.
1700-1900 The industrial revolution. Machinery makes things easier to mass produce and inventions such as steam power contribute to the language's lexicon.
1914-1918 World war 1
1939-1945 World war 2
1987 National Curriculum introduced. This standardises the level of teaching in schools.
1994 Text messaging is introduced.
1997 The first social networking site is introduced.
1922 The Oxford English dictionary is published.
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Language Development
aliceschofs
Spelling, punctuation and grammar in English
Sarah Holmes
Developing Grammar and Spelling Skills
Bob Read
English Language Activity Write Up #2 (completed)
08aliell
Language Change Activity Write Up (Completed)
08aliell
English Language
livbennett
Match the Theory to the Theorist - Language Acquisition
08aliell
Language Acquisition Theorists
08aliell
Standardisation in the 18th century
Elizabeth Carr
Child- directed speech (CDS)
megan langdon
Beginnings of language development
megan langdon