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American English 11 September 2014 Pétur Knútsson
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First session, Thursday 11 September 2014 Introduction: Home and International The expansion of the English language across the Atlantic into the North America. The mechanics of such a movement and its implications for the development of the language. Second session, Thursday 2 October Features of different varieties of American English and the salient differences between British and American English. Speculation about the future.
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Knútsson (2004), “English as a Dead Language” draws a distinction between “Home Englishes” and International English
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Maybe I should of. Maybe I should have. I should have done it. Perhaps I should have. Think of something. What are you thinking of? I should of done it Re-analysis
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Home and international “Home” Developing, diverging. L1, first language, preliterate acquisition International Standardised, stable. L2, second language, literate acquisition o Contact and interelations between the two 5
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Million speakers, 1985 375 1125 Britain, N. America, Australia, New Zealand, S.Africa, Anglo-Indian etc. Global English as a second or foreign language Figures from Kachru, in Quirk and Widdowson, English in the World, CUP 1985
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“Home” Englishes 3 modes of expansion of English: 1.extermination (“virgin territories”) 2.exploitation(“civilising the natives”) 3.internationa trade (cooperation and/or exploitation)
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“Home” Englishes In this course we are only discussing: 1.extermination (“virgin territories”)
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The “Home Englishes” Britain: – Highland Scottish – Lowland Scottish – Northern English, – West Midlands – East Midlands – Southern English (incl London) – SW English – Welsh English – Northern Irish – Irish Republic North America – Eastern Canada – Mid and Western Canada – Eastern USA – Southern USA – West USA The Southern Hemisphere – South Africa – Australia – New Zealand 9
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The Colonial Englishes as official languages: Africa: – Cameroon (with French) – Gambia – Ghana – Kenya – Liberia – Mauritius (with French) – Namibia – Nigeria – Sierra Leone – South Africaq – Tanzania – Uganda – Zimbabwe Asia – India – Bangladesh – Pakistan – Sri Lanka – Philipines – Hong Kong – 10
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The "second language" Englishes Europe – Romance, Germanic, Slavic languages –..... Icelandic Africa Indian subcontinent China....... 11
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First session, Thursday 11 September 2014 Introduction: Home and International The expansion of the English language across the Atlantic into the North America. The mechanics of such a movement and its implications for the development of the language.
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Chapter 11 of Baugh and Cable’s History of the English Language (originally published 1951) Sections 238-242: History of the settlement. See “European Settlement of N. America” in Ugla (Power Point self-study)
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European Settlement of N. America Colonial period Expansion period Later immigration { { { { Irish German Scandinavian S.Europe Slavonic Mexican Puerto Rican etc. African slaves War of Independence 1775-83 Civil War 1861-65 160017001800 1900
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