The Lexical Differences Between American English and British English英语专业毕业论文.doc
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1、The Lexical Differences Between American English and British EnglishAbstractWith the development of the two countriesAmerica and the U.K., the differences in some fields are clear and are also reflected in their languages. Even though there are many similarities in both variants, there are many diff
2、erences in lexicology because of different regions, social backgrounds, the ways of peoples thinking, etc. This paper discusses the differences in lexicology between British English and American English and their tendency through the historical development of the two variants.Key WordsAmerican Engli
3、sh; British English; the lexical difference 摘要美国是一个移民国家,美国英语主要是十七世纪英国英语在美国的进一步发展。美国英语和英国英语虽然有很多相同之处,但是由于历史文化和社会背景及人们的思维方式导致了很多的不同。随着社会的发展,美国英语与英国英语的差别越来越显著。本文通过回顾分析英国英语和美国英语的历史演变和发展过程,论述了美国英语和英国英语在词汇方面存在的主要差异,通过了解两种英语在词汇方面存在的差异,使英语学习者比较容易地掌握某一种英语以及正确地表达英语包含的丰富的知识。本文同时还指出了美国英语以其独有的特点和语言艺术魅力越来越受到人们的关注
4、,从而探讨英语的发展趋势。关键词美国英语;英国英语;词汇差异 IntroductionAmong the thousands of different languages in the world there is only one that can claim to be a more or less universal languageEnglish. It is estimated that there are over 300 million native speakers, of whom some 200 million live in the United States and
5、some 50 million in the United Kingdom. In addition to native speakers there are about 500 to 700 million people using English, which makes the total number of speakers nearly one-forth of the worlds population. Today, American English is particularly influential; there are many other varieties of En
6、glish around the world, including, for example, Australian English, New Zealand English, Canadian English, South African English, Indian English and Caribbean English. Among the different variants of English the two best known are American English and British English. There do exist differences betw
7、een the two, just as many differences in the varieties within themselves. To be consistent in the use of English, and more importantly, to be understood, the nonnative speaker needs to know which words have distinct meanings and pronunciations depending on whether they are used by an Englishman or a
8、n American. This is necessary not only for sake of communication, but also to avoid embarrassment. This paper will focus on how American English came to be different from British English in lexicology. . Historical Background of British and American EnglishA. The History of British EnglishThe histor
9、y of the English language can be dated from the arrival of three Germanic tribes to the Britain during the 5th Century AD. Angles, Saxons and Jutes crossed the North Sea from what is the present day Denmark and northern Germany to Britain. The inhabitants of Britain previously spoke a Celtic languag
10、e. However, it was quickly displaced by the language brought with the invaders. Most of the Celtic speakers were pushed into Wales, Cornwall and Scotland. One group migrated to the Brittany Coast of France where their descendants still speak the Celtic Language of Breton today. The Angles were named
11、 from Engle, their land of origin. After experiencing constant development, immigrates language had changed into the current English. Up to now, it has more than one thousand five hundred years, which some scholars divided into several stages in order to illustrate the history of English. However, t
12、hey did not divide it in the same way. “Here quotes the way of American professor Kennedy who divided historical process of period into such three stages” (Guo Boyu 5).1. The Period of Old English The period from 450 to 1100 is known as the Old English. The earliest period begins with the immigratio
13、n of certain Germanic tribes from the continent to Britain in the fifth century A. D., though no records of their language survive from before the seventh century, and it continues to the end of the eleventh century or maybe a bit later. As having been seen that English language did not simply sprin
14、g into existence; it was brought from the Continent by Germanic tribes who had no form of writing and hence left no records. Philologists know that they must have spoken a dialect of a language that can be called West Germanic. By that time Latin, Old Norse (the language of the Viking invaders), and
15、 especially the Anglo-Norman French of the dominant class after the Norman Conquest in 1066 had begun to have a substantial impact on the lexicon. The following brief sample of Old English prose illustrates several of the significant ways in which English has transformed. A few of these words will b
16、e recognized as identical in spelling with their modern equivalents - he, of, him, for, and, on etc., and some of words are familiar to modern words, which can be easily guessed, such as wre to were, ws to was, of which only these who have made special study of Old English can understand what their
17、meanings are.Following American independence, famous persons like Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and Webster began to consider that the country should have a language of its own. English in America has developed a character of its own, reflecting the life and the physical and social environment of th
18、e American people. As time went on, the English language gradually changed on both sides of the Atlantic. The Americans adopted many words from foreign languages and invented large number of new words to meet their various needs. .Reasons for the Development of American EnglishA. Being in Different
19、RegionsBritish English changed after the emigrants left their homeland while American English formed after the colonists settled on the continent. The Origin of American English was in the Colonial Period in the 17th century when the English language first came to America with the colonists. After a
20、rriving in the new continent-North America, the early settlers were not with just the only English language; there undoubtedly were several different dialects and they obviously had to cope with a general lack of uniformity of speech. It is also obvious that the changes producing the two variants of
21、 English happened on both sides of the ocean. In those days it was very difficult for an immigrant in America to be in contact with people left behind in the old country and therefore the changes in language on either side did not transfer to the other. Life in America, in a totally new environment,
22、 was different from the life of the settlers; therefore language had to evolve because of the necessity of talking about new things, qualities, operations, concepts and ideas. There were features of colonial and frontier life that did not have an expression in the British English language; they enco
23、untered new plants, domesticated fish and animals. Later they found themselves living among tribes of indigenous peoples who spoke strange languages, wore strange clothing, prepared strange foods and maintained tribal customs quite different from anything they had previously encountered. Even landsc
24、apes were different from the English countryside. All of these unfamiliar things needed to be named in order to lead their new life in the continent without obstacles. Therefore, they have created new words for new things they had seen.B. Borrowing Words from Other CountriesBorrowing words from the
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