Legal english.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Legal English Chapter 8. Preview Development of the English legal system Development of legal English Characteristics of legal English Legal English as.
Advertisements

Unit 4 Medieval Origins of the Modern State. Geography.
Influence of the English Government
England and France Develop Aim: How did the development of France and England lead to democratic traditions? Do Now: What role did the guilds play in the.
1/28 Focus: Kings began to gain more power and centralize power during the high middle ages England was one of the first countries in Europe to develop.
Middle English External History History of the English Language.
Middle English. Edward the Confessor’s Heirs n Godwin, Earl of Wessex, and his son Harold n William, Duke of Normandy n Harald III (Sigurdsson) Hårdråde,
The History of the English Language “a brief overview”
THE HIGH MIDDLE AGES: 1000 to 1300
 Nobles and the Church had as much power as monarchs (in some cases they were more powerful)  Nobles and Church had their own courts, collected their.
Unit 4 Chapter 8 section 1 Royal power grows Goals:
History of English In a Nutshell.
MIDDLE AGES D’WALL’S WORLD HISTORY. Monarchs, Nobles, and the Church During feudal times, monarchs in Europe stood at the head of society but had limited.
Key Terms William the Conqueror Henry I Common law Magna Carta
History of English. Early English Development Major influences on the development and spread of the English language begins in 400 CE. – Around 400 AD,
May 25, 2010 Which of the following is a safeguard against being kept in jail unlawfully? a. Bill of attainder b. Writ of Habeas Corpus c. Stare decisis.
The Struggle of Power in England and France
Three Feudal Kingdoms CHW3M. Feudal System in England 5 th and 6 th Century Germanic tribes migrate to Britain include Jutes, Angles and Saxons In 886.
William I, known as William the Conqueror, was king of England from 1066 to As king, William reorganized the feudal system, making all landholders.
Unit 4 Medieval Origins of the Modern State. Geography.
CHAPTER 13 – THE MIDDLE AGES CHAPTER 14 – THE FORMATION OF WESTERN EUROPE.
Diffusion of Ideas and Systems: The Middle Ages in Europe New political, economic and social structures emerge upon the collapse of political.
Monarchs, nobles, and the church -Monarchs were the head of society, but relied on vassals for military support. -both nobles and the church had their.
England and France Develop. England (Early Invasions) ► Vikings (Danish) ► Alfred the Great turns back Vikings  England United under 1 rule  “Land of.
A brief history of the English language
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Royal Power in the High Middle Ages.
+ The High Middle Ages ( ). + Growth of Royal Power in England and France What are monarchs? Monarchs struggled to exert royal authority over.
England and France Develop Chaptee 14 Section 3. I England Absorbs Waves of Invaders A. Early Invaders Danish Vikings invade & fought off by Alfred the.
THURSDAY Agenda Map Time – 10 mins Nation State PPT Magna Carta Reading What’s Due Magna Carta What’s Next France, Russia, Monguls.
THE HIGH AND LATE MIDDLE AGES Royal Power Grows. Objectives Learn how monarchs gained power over nobles and the Church. Describe how William the Conqueror.
Old English ( AD) A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE.
Warm-up List 5 types of laws and give an example of each.
Languages for Specific Purposes and Legal English
Legal english.
Sources of Legal English
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.
1 So, the prisoner has been charged, the CPS has decided there is
From Scandinavia (Modern Denmark, Norway and Sweden) Name 'Viking' means “pirate raid“ in Old Norse Dominated Northern Europe from about 700 to.
Sources of Legal English
England & France Develop
Legal english.
Objectives Learn how monarchs gained power over nobles and the Church.
Warm-up: September 5, 2012 What is feudalism?
The Rise of Nation States: England and France
Chapter 8 High Middle Ages.
From Scandinavia (Modern Denmark, Norway and Sweden) Name 'Viking' means “pirate raid“ in Old Norse Dominated Northern Europe from about 700 to.
Languages for Specific Purposes and Legal English
Rise of Modern Nations England
Legal terms.
Language and Law.
Middle English 1150 – 1500 French for nobility and royal court
How & why does King John have his power limited?
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.
Chapter 4, lesson 3 The Growth of European Kingdoms
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.
Chapter 15 Law in America.
Government Notes The Judicial Branch.
Royal Power in the High Middle Ages
Chapter 15 Courts Judges and the Law.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.
England & France Develop
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.
Bell Ringer What is a monarch?
Legal English Chapter 8.
Legal english A short history.
How & why does King John have his power limited?
The Law and the Individual
Presentation transcript:

Legal english

Preview Historical development of English Language contacts in the history of English The spread of English Development of legal English

HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE OLD ENGLISH (c. 450- c. 1100) MIDDLE ENGLISH (c. 1100- c.1450) MODERN ENGLISH (c. 1450 - )

Migrations of Angles, Saxons and Jutes

Viking invasions in Europe (late 8th c.- mid-11th c.)

SCANDINAVIAN PLACE NAMES

LATER OLD ENGLISH (c. 850 - c.1100) Language Contacts OLD NORSE Lexical words Nouns: birth, bull, dirt, egg, fellow, husband, leg, sister, skin, sky, skirt, window Adjectives: ill, low, odd, rotten, sly, weak Verbs: call, crawl, die, get, give, lift, raise, scream, take, Function words Pronouns: they (their, them) Conjunctions: though Determiners: some, any Auxiliaries: are Names Family names: -son: Johnson, Stevenson Place names: -by 'farm, town': Derby, Rugby, Whitby; -thorp 'village': Althorp, Linthorp

The norman conquest (1066) The Norman Conquest brought to England a French-speaking upper class Latin – dominant in law Normans – used Latin in important contexts 11-12 c. Latin was the language of legal documents in England

Rise of Law French 1st law promulgated in French in 1275 End of 13th c. both Latin and French used as legislative languages Early 14th c. French used in drafting laws (except in Church matters)

MIDDLE ENGLISH (c. 1100-1450) French Influence Administration Authority, bailiff, baron, chamberlain, chancellor, constable, council, court, crown, duke, empire, exchequer, government, liberty, majesty, mayor, messenger, minister, noble, palace, parliament, prince, realm, reign, revenue, royal, servant, sir, sovereign, statute, tax, traitor, treason, treasurer, treaty Law Accuse, advocate, arrest, arson, assault, assize, attorney, bail, bar, blame, convict, crime, decree, depose, estate, evidence, executor, felon, fine, fraud, heir, indictment, inquest, jail, judge, jury, justice, larceny, legacy, libel, pardon, perjury, plaintiff, plea, prison, punishment, sue, summons, trespass, verdict, warrant Military Ambush, archer, army, battle, besiege, captain, combat, defend, enemy, garrison, guard, lance, lieutenant, navy, retreat, sergeant, siege, soldier, vanquish

Decline of Law Latin and Law French 1362 Statute of Pleading “All lawsuits shall be conducted in English, because French is much unknown in the said realm” – drafted in French!

Dominance of Latin, French and English 1000 1200 1500 2000 Latin supremacy Law French supremacy English supremacy

Latin influence shortened expressions: Nisi prius (‘unless before’) = a matter of proceedings at first instance with a jury present Affidavit (‘he affirmed’) = ‘a written or printed declaration confirmed by an oath’ Habeas corpus (‘you may have the body’) = a judge’s order to bring a prisoner before the court to clarify the legality of detaining him

French influence Influence on word formation: Old French past participle: -e or –ee Doer of the action: -or/-er (for the person obtaining sth or forming the object of an action Employer/employee, trustor/trustee, vendor/vendee Word order (Accounts payable, attorney general, court martial, fee simple, letters patent)

LeGal language: synonyms Binary expressions: words with the same meaning existed at the same time in the form of Latin-French variants and Anglo-Saxon variants . Repetitions ensured that legal messages were understandable in a multilingual society Acknowledge and confess, act and deed, devise and bequeath, fit and proper, goods and chattels, will and testament null and void and of no effect, authorized, empowered and entitled to To tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth

Richard Mulcaster (1582) “The English tongue is of small account, stretching no further than this island of ours, nay not there over all.”

THE SPREAD OF ENGLISH

English as a Global Language: Some 1,200-1,500 million people in command of English; 670 million native speakers English – official language in 75 states or administrative territories 85% international organisations use English as one of their languages Dominance in international trade

Tripartite model (B. Kachru)