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Language Formal object (sound laws, shifts, syntax, etc.) Linked to the life of the speakers (language cannot be separated from the culture of which it.

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Presentation on theme: "Language Formal object (sound laws, shifts, syntax, etc.) Linked to the life of the speakers (language cannot be separated from the culture of which it."— Presentation transcript:

1 language Formal object (sound laws, shifts, syntax, etc.) Linked to the life of the speakers (language cannot be separated from the culture of which it is part)

2 Events that have influenced AE Population mobility (external and internal migrations) Innovation Break with the past (Europe, Natives) Democracy Large land area Ethnically diverse population

3 Spread of E as a world language British empire American technological and economic hegemony > separation between the 2 nations in 1776 was schizophrenic:  Rejection  Nostalgia

4 Noah Webster Patriot and lexicographer Nationalist agenda Proposed simplification of spellings A host of new words ---

5 Major differences Vocabulary  Americanism  Contribution of other languages Style 19 th century  Stereotype of AE as “tall talk, turgidity, and taboo”  Declamatory style, Kentucky spirit Pronunciation and class accent  Pronunciation should follow spelling (Webster  Relaxed pronunciation VS peremptory RP  Rhotacism Bush: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kiqs_ZxDiXM&feature =related Blair: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPCTBXse80c

6 The first use of the word Americanism is by John Witherspoon (1781), a Scot and then president of the Princeton College: “Americanism, by which I understand an use of phrases or terms, or a construction of sentences, even among persons of rank or education, different from the use of the same terms or phrase, or the construction of similar sentences, in Great Britain […] it does not follow in every case, that the terms of phrases used are worse in themselves, but merely that they are American and not of English growth.”

7 More recent definitions of Americanism From the Oxford English Dictionary. The Dictionary of American English: “not only words and phrases which are clearly or apparently of American origin, or have greater currency here than elsewhere, but also every word denoting something which has a real connection with the development of the country and the history of its people” (William Craigie)

8 From Dictionary of Americanisms: “'Americanism' means a word or expression that originated in the United States. The term includes: outright coinages, such as appendicitis...such words as adobe...which first became English in the US; and terms such as faculty, fraternity, refrigerator when used in senses first given them in American usage” (Mitford Mathews)

9 2 points reconciled by John Algeo Synchronic Americanism: “expression with characteristic form or use in America, whatever its origin” Diachronic Americanism: “expression that originated in America, whatever its current use”

10 Some lexicon... http://www.woodlands- junior.kent.sch.uk/customs/questions/americanb ritish.html http://www.woodlands- junior.kent.sch.uk/customs/questions/americanb ritish.html http://www.uta.fi/FAST/US1/REF/usgbdiff.html# a2b http://www.uta.fi/FAST/US1/REF/usgbdiff.html# a2b


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