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The study of the history of words: How meaning develops Dr. L. CastaldoGreen
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The Indo-European Language: English Spanish Icelandic Romanian Hindi Bengali Persian Began over 7,000 years ago in the Indus Valley and spread as people migrated throughout the world Vowels changed; consonants didn’t change much
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Indo-European didn’t have a writing system Pictographic forms of representation were used Sumerians in Mesopotamia developed writing around 3,000 B.C.E. Created a logographic system Cuneiform Context is key to understanding meaning Syllabic system developed in Sumeria simultaneous to Egyptian, Phoenician and Greek systems All three of these use similar characters The first alphabetic system developed in Greece The first technologic invention
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English has not changed much over the last several hundred years Prior to that, however, “English” would be progressively difficult to understand Greek and Latin roots Most English vocabulary comes from Classical Greek or Latin words/roots Prefixes and Suffixes are used to form thousands of words Connecting vowels are used to join morphemes Influence began over 2,000 years ago “Vini, vidi, vici”
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Germanic Influence (by invasion) Anglo-Saxon develops All of the 100 most frequently used words in English come from Old English (e.g. the, is, on, in, for, go, run, I, we, me, he, she) Inflection conveyed meaning A.D. 597 – Augustine arrives Church Latin spread Norsemen arrive – Scandinavian influence
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The Norman French arrive (1066) French “Latin” words pass onto English – leads to finer conceptual distinctions (e.g. swine vs. pork, sheep vs. mutton) Phrases are condensed (e.g. break the fast = breakfast) Latter 14 th Century – Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales is published Finest expression of Middle English Printing Press – 1475 in England London dialect became “standard” dialect
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Hundreds of thousands of words Spread of English through British Empire from the 17 th century onward Spread of American English since WWII Native American terms entered language Contact with new cultures expanded language Greek and Latin roots used to create new scientific terms 1755 – Dictionary of English Language published 1828 – American Dictionary of English Language
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Fundamentally the same – provide labels and the keys to understanding Context will change idiomatic meanings Digital Literacy will cause continual evolution of words and word usage “The long reign of black-and-white textual truth has ended” (Lanham, 1993). Approach vocabulary instruction with the goal of providing students with the keys to understanding words
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