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The History of English

An Introduction
TaschenbuchKartoniert, Paperback
Englisch
Taylor & Franciserschienen am31.05.20243. Auflage
The History of English provides a chronological analysis of the linguistic, social, and cultural development of the English language from before its establishment in Britain around the year 450 to the present. Each chapter represents a new stage in the evolution of the language.mehr
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TaschenbuchKartoniert, Paperback
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Produkt

KlappentextThe History of English provides a chronological analysis of the linguistic, social, and cultural development of the English language from before its establishment in Britain around the year 450 to the present. Each chapter represents a new stage in the evolution of the language.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-1-032-40969-6
ProduktartTaschenbuch
EinbandartKartoniert, Paperback
Erscheinungsjahr2024
Erscheinungsdatum31.05.2024
Auflage3. Auflage
SpracheEnglisch
MasseBreite 209 mm, Höhe 275 mm, Dicke 20 mm
Gewicht1100 g
Artikel-Nr.61197471

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
List of IllustrationsList of PlatesList of FiguresList of MapsList of TimelinesList of TablesLists of TextsLists of AbbreviationsPreface to the first editionPreface to the second editionPreface to the third editionAcknowledgmentsPART IBefore Britain1 The origins of English (before 450)Chapter overview1.1 The origins of human language1.2 Language change1.3 Changes in Germanic before the invasions of Britain1.4 The world of the Germanic peoples1.5 The Germanic migrations1.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther readingPART IIEarly English in Britain2 Old English: early Germanic Britain (450-700)Chapter overview2.1 The first peoples2.2 The Germanic incursions2.3 Introduction to Old English2.4 The Christianization of England2.5 Literature in the early Old English period2.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther reading3 Old English: the Viking invasions and their consequences (700-1066/1100)Chapter overview3.1 The Viking invasions3.2 Linguistic influence of Old Norse (ON)3.3 Creolization3.4 Standardization3.5 Social and linguistic variation3.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther reading4 Middle English: The non-standard period (1066/1100-1350)Chapter overview4.1 Dynastic conflict and the Norman Conquest4.2 Middle English and question of creolization4.3 Linguistic features of Middle English in the non-standard period4.4 English literature4.5 Dialectal diversity in ME4.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther reading5 Middle English: the emergence of Standard English (1350-1500)Chapter overview5.1 Political and social turmoil and demographic developments5.2 The expansion of domains5.3 Chancery English5.4 Literature in the late ME period5.5 Variation in late ME5.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther reading6 The Early Modern English Period (1500-1700)Chapter overview6.1 The Early Modern English Period6.2 Early Modern English6.3 Regulation and codification6.4 Religious and scientific prose and belles lettres6.5 Variation6.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther readingPART IIIBritain and beyond7 The spread of English (since the late sixteenth century)Chapter overview7.1 Social-historical background7.2 European expansion and the slave trade7.3 North America7.4 The Southern Hemisphere7.5 Second and foreign language countries (ESL and EFL)7.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther reading8 Standard and non-standard EnglishChapter overview8.1 Standard English and General English8.2 English in England, Wales, Scotland - and Ireland8.3 North American English (NAmE)8.4 Southern Hemisphere English8.5 Ethnicity and language8.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther reading9 English pidgins, English creoles, and English (since the early seventeenth century)Chapter overview9.0 Cultural survivals9.1 Pidgins9.2 Creoles9.3 Pidgin and creole communities9.4 Theories of origin9.5 History and textual examples9.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther reading10 Grammatical change in ModEChapter overview10.0 Grammatical developments10.1 Word order10.2 The noun phrase10.3 The verb phrase: development of full ModE paradigm10.4 Other: conjunctions and prepositions10.5 Substrate influence10.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther reading11 Pronunciation change in ModEChapter overview11.1 Introduction and principles of pronunciation change11.2 The reference accents and other national accents11.3 Consonants in ModE11.4 Vowels in ModE11.5 Vowel changes in ModE: chain shifts and mergers11.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther reading12 Vocabulary and Spelling Change in ModEChapter overview12.1 New words and old12.2 Borrowing12.3 Word formation12.4 Pragmatics12.5 Modern English spelling12.6 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther readingPART IV13 Worldwide EnglishChapter overview13.1 The beginnings of Global English13.2 Media dominance13.3 Features of medialized language13.4 English in a world-wide context13.5 Bilingualism, code-switching, and hybrid lasnguages13.4 SummaryStudy questionsTopics of interest for further studyFurther readingGlossaryThe International Phonetic AlphabetGeneral bibliographyIndexmehr

Autor

Stephan Gramley is Studiendirektor associated with the Department of Linguistics and Literary Studies at Bielefeld University, Germany, where he has worked in the area of language and cultural studies. He has published books on the English language: A Survey of Modern English with Kurt-Michael Pätzold (1st and 2nd editions) and Vivian Gramley (3rd edition); The Vocabulary of World English, and the Bielefeld Introduction to Applied Linguistics (with Vivian Gramley).

Vivian Gramley is a senior lecturer at Bielefeld University, Germany, teaching in applied linguistics, the linguistics of the language system, and language practice. She has published in the areas of clinical linguistics and Deaf education as well as edited the Bielefeld Introduction to Applied Linguistics (with Stephan Gramley), and published the 3rd edition of A Survey of Modern English (with Stephan Gramley and Kurt-Michael Pätzold) and Writing in English Studies (with Katharina Pietsch and Tyll Zybura).