Comment on the Shift of English Language from a Highly Synthetic Language into an Analytic One英语论文.doc
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1、Comment on the Shift of English Language from a Highly Synthetic Language into an Analytic One Nowadays, English is a global language, and there are more than 370million people who speak English as their first language. But even for these native English speakers, if you present a page of old English
2、 to them, they may look at it more strange than look at a page of French or Italian because of the huge differences between old English and modern English. Generally speaking, old English distinguishes from modern English in such aspects as spelling, pronunciation, the lexical and the grammar. Of th
3、ese differences, grammar is of fundamental feature that makes old English different from the language of today. Old English is a highly inflectional language. Inflectional languages fall into two classes: one is synthetic, the other is analytic. Synthetic language is also called inflected language.
4、It refers to one in which its meaning is expressed by inflectional endings, not by word order. Synthetic language uses inflectional forms, such as affixes, as primary means of indicating the grammatical function of the words in the language. In Indo-European languages, these most commonly take the f
5、orm of endings on the noun and pronoun, the adjective and the verb. The opposite of a synthetic language is an analytic language, also known as isolating language. It refers to one in which every morpheme forms a separate word, and individual particles are used to convey grammatical functions. In an
6、alytic language, the word forms are mostly or totally fixed, and grammatical functions are indicated through the use of helper words and word order. Chinese is an example of an analytic language. Modern English is also an analytic. In Modern English, the subject and the object do not have distinctiv
7、e forms, nor do we have inflectional endings to indicate the other relations marked by case endings in Latin, except in the possessive case and in pronouns. The development of English from old one to new one is a vivid illustration of the language shift from highly synthetic to analytic. The shift o
8、f English language from highly synthetic to analytic is not finished in a day, but through several periods covering a span of more than 1500 years. Generally, it can be divided into four distinctive periods.They are the Old English(450-1100); Middle English(1100-1500); Early Modern English(1500-1800
9、) and Later Modern English(1800-present). During each period, there are several elements which caused the change of English either in spelling, pronunciation, grammar or vocabulary. 1. Old English Old English is known as a full-inflectional language period. The ancestors of modern British people, Ju
10、tes, Saxon and Angle were from Jutland and southern Demark of west Gemanic. They spoke a mutually intelligible language, because they shared many common features of Germanic language. They were very similar at grammar such as possessing a strong and weak declensions of adjective and verb; All the th
11、ree languages showed some shift in certain consonants, and also they beard a distinctive type of conjugation of the verbs so called weaker regular verbs. Old English was chiefly used as a spoken language, the spoken language was not stable, it might vary from person to person. So Old English was not
12、 entirely uniformed language. It was distinguished in four dialects, they were the Northumbrain spoken in north of Humber; Mercian spoken between the Humber and the Thames; West Saxon the dialect of the west Saxon kingdom in the south west and Kentish spoken by Jutes in the southeast. These dialects
13、 merged into the Anglo-Saxon language known as Old English. Besides these four dialects, Old English was also influenced by other factors which could be traced from the resources of vocabulary. Generally, there were three resources where Old English could borrow. One is the Celtic language. Old Engl
14、ish had handful of Celtic language. It borrowed Celtic words mainly in the names of places such as Dover, London, York, etc. Another borrowed language is Scandinavian language. The Scandinavian influence upon Old English was also mainly about the names of places such as the places named by using suf
15、fixes -by, -throp, -thwaite, etc. The third influence came from Latin. During the 400 years of Roman controlling British, Latin influenced English slightly. This was the first period of the Latin influence, which was the slightest of all the influences. The second period and also the large scale of
16、Latin words pouring into English was through conversion of Britain to Roman Christianity beginning in 597. For example, some learning terms came from Latin because education was chiefly run by church. As for the characteristics of Old English, they would be showed through the following three ways. F
17、irst is the phonology. Old English retained the five vowels, /a/ /e/ /i/ /o/ /u/ and long vowels /a/ /e/ /i/ /o/ /u/ and consonants such as p=th, sch=sh c=r. The second is lexicon. The vocabulary of Old English which purely belonged to the Gemanic family died out in large scale. The survived Old Eng
18、lish words became the basic words today. The third is syntax. Old English retained all the inflectional features. In grammar, Old English resembles modern German. Theoretically the noun and adjective are inflected for four cases (they are nominative, genitive, dative, accusative) in the singular and
19、 four in the plural, and in addition the adjective has separated forms for each of the three genders (they are masculine, feminine and neuter) , the inflection of the verb is less elaborate than that of the Latin verb, but there are distinctive endings for the different persons, numbers (they are si
20、ngular and plural), tenses (they are present, imperfect, aorist, perfect, plu perfect and future perfect) and moods (they are indictive, subjunctive, imperative and injunctive) The nature of the Old English inflection will be illustrated from the following aspects. A. The Noun The inflection of the
21、Old English noun indicates distinctions of number and case. The Old English has only four cases. The endings of these cases vary with different nouns, but they fall into certain broad categories or declensions. There is a vowel declension and a consonant declension, also called the strong and weak d
22、eclensions. Their nature is gathered from two examples of the strong declension and one of the weak: stan(stone), a masculine a- stem; giefu (gift) a feminine o- stem; and hunta ( hunter), a masculine consonant - stem.Singular N. stan gief -u hunt -a G. stan-es gief -e hunt -an D. Stan-e gief -e hun
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