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ENG501 Midterm Subjective Paper

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ENG 501- History of English Language

Midterm Exam Questions and Answers


Compiled by: Farwa and Sabika

Short Questions (2 or 3 marks each)

Q: Explain Linguistics briefly.

A: The scientific study of language and its structure, including the study of
grammar, syntax, and phonetics. Specific branches of linguistics include
sociolinguistics, dialectology, psycholinguistics, computational linguistics,
comparative linguistics, and structural linguistics.

Q- Define diachronic linguistics.

A- Diachronic linguistics is the scientific study of language change over


time. It is the study of language through different periods in history. It maps
the shifts, fractures and mutations of languages over the centuries.

Q- Language of law court.

A- French was the language of lawyers and the law courts down to 1362.

Q- Difference between inflection and derivation?

A- Morphology has two main subdivisions, namely inflection and derivation.


Inflection deals with patterns of word structure that are determined by the
role of words in sentences. Derivation creates new words with different
meanings e.g., maltreat from treat.

Q- Role of literature in language.

A- Literature is a mirror of times and also a mirror of language/s used


during the times. So for example, literature written in England during the
Middle English period also reflects the times and language choices of the
times.

Q- Anglicism. (*No such term found- Answer for the term ‘Anglia’)

A- The terms Angli and Anglia occur beside Saxons and refer not to the
Angles individually but to the West Germanic tribes generally.

Q- Arbitrariness.

A- Arbitrariness: There is no ‘natural’ connection between a linguistic form


and its meaning.

Q- Time of old English.

A- c.500 to c.1100

Q- Origin of word ‘English’.

A- The word ‘English’ is derived from the name of the Angles (OE Engle)
but is used without distinction for the language of all the invading tribes.

Q- Article in Middle English.

A- The definite article in ME is almost invariably ‘te’ or ‘the’.

Example: ‘te castles and bi the fet’.

Q: Status of Latin in 15th Century.

A: In the fifteenth century, English succeeds in displacing Latin as the


general language spoken and written.

Q: What is language family tree?

A: A language family is a group of languages related through descent from


a common ancestral language or parental language, called the proto-
language of that family.

Q: What John Barton wrote in his book in 15th century?


A: In the first decade of the fifteenth century, John Barton wrote a ‘Donet
François’, a treatise intended for adults who wished to learn French.

Q: Two divisions in Celtic language.

A: The Celtic languages in England had two divisions: Gaelic or Goidelic


branch and the Brythonic branch.

Q: Army and Navy examples in Middle English.

A: Control of the army and navy was in the hands of French people so
naturally French military terms were used. Examples include: army, navy,
peace, enemy, arms, battle, combat, skirmish, defense, ambush, retreat,
soldier, garrison, guard, and spy. Also Officers: captain, lieutenant and
sergeant are French words.

Q: English and England difference.

A: From the beginning, writers in the vernacular never called their language
anything but Englisc (English). The word is derived from the name of the
Angles (OE Engle) but is used without distinction for the language of all the
invading tribes. From about the year 1000, the name England (land of the
Angles) began to be used in place of Angelcynn. The name English is thus
older than the name England.

Q: Difference between “Thee” and “Thou”.

A: Today we use you in both cases. In Old English, thou and thee were
singular and ye and you were plural, but in Middle English times the custom
arose of using ye/you as a polite or deferential way of addressing a single
person, and this usage spread; thou and thee gradually dropped out of use
in everyday speech, and finally disappeared (except in some dialects,
where they persist to this day).

Q: Vowels in Old English.

A: Old English contains six vowel symbols a, e, i, o, u and y, and a seventh


one, a, called ‘ash’. All these represent both long and short vowels.

Q: French importance in 15th century.


A: Answer-1:

By the fifteenth century, writing French was less common whereas


speaking French fluently was accomplishment.

The importance of French language was waning.

Answer-2:

French being so long the mark of the privileged class was and is still:

• The language of culture

• The language of fashion

• The language of style

• The language of sophistication

Q: Why are Angles superior than jutes and Saxons?

A: the Germanic tribes that conquered England were the Jutes, Saxons,
and Angles. The original name of England means “Land of the Angles”.
Angles and Jutes were the first of tribes to invade Britain in large numbers.
The Angles were established in England before the Saxons took over.

Q: What’s a family tree?

A: The Family Tree Model

• First attempt at depicting the relationship between languages.

• It has assumptions:

1. The Regularity Hypothesis 2. The Relatedness Hypothesis

Q: Write About inflection and Derivation.

A: Morphology has two main subdivisions, namely inflection and derivation.


Inflection deals with patterns of word structure that are determined by the
role of words in sentences. Derivation creates new words with different
meanings e.g., maltreat from treat.
Q: Indifference of noble class and kings.

A: They did not cultivate English, though had acquaintance with it.

The reason was that their activities in England did not necessitate it.

Their constant concern with continental affairs made French useful.

Q: John Wycliffe work.

A: John Wycliffe was the first person to translate the entire Bible into
English. He died in 1384, and his translation probably dates from the last
few years of his life.

Q: Vowels in Middle English.

A: Late OE and Early ME vowel-lengthening happened in Late Old English


period but became apparent in ME period. In many cases the vowels were
shortened again during the ME period, but long vowels remained in some
dialects, especially before the groups ‘ld, mb and nd’.

Q: Role of language in literature.

A: In literature, a language displays:

• Its full power.

• Its ability to convey thoughts in a vivid form.

• Its ability to record emotions.

Q: Describe Inflectional affixes.

A: The process by which affixes combine with roots to indicate basic


grammatical categories such as tense or plurality are inflectional suffixes
(e.g. in 'cat-s', 'talk-ed', '-s' and'-ed').
Long Questions (5 marks each)

Q: English in post-independent Pakistan.

A: English is ideologically useful to the post-independence government of


Pakistan trying to unify a newly established political entity, while at the
same time carrying on the day-to-day tasks of education and
administration. These factors favored keeping English as an official
language. However, its retention was strongly opposed by religious parties
‘who felt that maintaining the status of English symbolized a new form of
colonization’ (Mahboob and Ahmar, 2008, p. 245). They wanted an Islamic
state with a local language. In response, successive governments in the
first thirty years of the postcolonial period passed recommendations to
develop and elevate the status of other languages, Urdu in particular, but
did little to implement them before 1977.

Q: Define Morpheme.

A: A morpheme is a unit of meaning. It does not necessarily relate to the


‘word count’ or ‘syllable count’ of an utterance. Every morpheme can be
classified as either free or bound. These categories are mutually exclusive,
and as such, a given morpheme will belong to exactly one of them.

• Free morphemes can function independently as words (e.g. town, dog)


and can appear within lexemes (e.g. town hall, doghouse).

• Bound morphemes appear only as parts of words, always in conjunction


with a root and sometimes with other bound morphemes. For example, un-
appears only accompanied by other morphemes to form a word. Most
bound morphemes in English are affixes, particularly prefixes and suffixes.
Examples of suffixes are -tion, -ation, -ible, -ing, etc. Bound morphemes
that are not affixed are called cranberry morphemes.

Q: Define Phonology and Morphology.

A: Phonology is the study of how sounds are organized and used in natural
languages. The phonological system of a language includes an inventory of
sounds and their features and rules which specify how sounds interact with
each other. Phonological development refers to forming and using speech
sounds to clearly communicate language. As more sounds of a language
are acquired, language becomes clearer as well as pronunciation, fluency,
and intonation improves. There are approximately 44 speech sounds in
English. Speech sounds used in combination with other speech sounds
produce an oral language.

In linguistics, morphology is the branch of grammar devoted to the study of


the structure or forms of words, primarily through the use of the morpheme
construct. It is traditionally distinguished from syntax.

Q: Define the literature of Anglo-Saxon.

A: The literature of the Anglo-Saxons is the richest and the most significant
of any preserved literatures among the early Germanic people. Two types
of this literature were brought to England by the Germanic conquerors from
their continental homes and preserved in oral tradition. It is influenced by
reintroduction of Christianity into the southern part of the island at the end
of the sixth century. Two streams mingle in Old English literature; these are
pagan and the Christian. Both the traditions constantly overlay.

Q: Define verbs in Middle English.

A:

• The principal changes in the verb during this time were the serious losses
suffered by the strong conjugation. This conjugation, although including
some of the most important verbs in the language, was relatively small as
compared with the large and steadily growing body of weak verbs.

• An occasional verb developed a strong past tense or past participle by


analogy with similar strong verbs. New verbs formed from nouns and
adjectives or borrowed from other languages were regularly conjugated as
weak.

• Nearly a third of the strong verbs in OE died out early in the ME period.
Ninety of them have left no traces in written records after 1150. Some of
them may have been current for a time in the spoken language, but except
where an occasional verb survives in a modern dialect, they are not
recorded. Its use was not governed by any strong sense and
circumstances led to these changes

• So, it was natural that many speakers should apply the pattern of weak
verbs to some of the verbs which were historically strong.

Q: Consequences of the Event in 1404.

A: An incident that occurred in 1404 seems at first sight to offer an extreme


case. The king of France had refused to recognize Henry IV when he
seized the English throne. Finally, an attempt was made to settle the matter
by negotiation. In negotiations, the English ambassadors complained about
the use of French. They asked to use Latin. Twice they spoke of French as
being as unknown as Hebrew. Before middle of 15th century, it was
necessary to have a ‘Secretary in the French language’ among the
government officials. By the end of the century, Caxton could write: ‘For the
mooste quantyte of the people vnderstonde not latyn ne frensshe here in
this noble royame of englond.’

Q: Write a note on Middle English?

A: The change in conditions after 1200 led to the re-establishment of


English during the period of 1200–1500. Shortly after 1200 conditions
changed. England lost an important part of its possessions abroad. The
nobility gradually relinquished their continental estates. This led to a feeling
of rivalry that developed between the two countries. An anti-foreign
movement in England culminated in the Hundred Years’ War. During the
century and a half following the Norman Conquest, French had been not
only natural but also more or less necessary to the English upper class.
However, in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries its maintenance
became increasingly artificial. For a time, certain new factors helped it to
hold its ground, socially and officially. Meanwhile, social and economic
changes affecting the English-speaking part of the population were taking
place. In the fourteenth century, English won its way back into universal
use, and in the fifteenth century French totally disappeared
Q: Write a note on duality.

A: There are certain features of human language that distinguish it from


other means of communication and Duality is one of them.

Duality: Human language is organized at two levels or layers


simultaneously. We have a physical level at which we can produce
individual sounds, like n, b and I, but beyond this we can organize a variety
of sentences.

Q: Why Normans Adopted French?

A: The members of the new ruling class were sufficiently predominant to


continue to use their own language. This was natural enough. For 200
years after the Norman Conquest, French remained the language of
ordinary intercourse among the upper classes in England.

Normans readily adopted the French civilization. They injected fresh vigor
into what they borrowed, profited from French military forces and took
important features of Frankish law. Accepted Christianity and constructed
Norman cathedrals. Locals gave up their own language and learned
French. Consequently, Old Scandinavian tongue disappeared rapidly.
Second duke sent his son to Bayeux to learn something of the speech of
his forefathers.

Q: Pronoun in Old English.

A: From the frequency of its use and the necessity for specific reference
when used, the personal pronoun in all languages is likely to preserve a
fairly complete system of inflections. Old English shows this tendency not
only in having distinctive forms for practically all genders, persons, and
cases but also in preserving addition to the ordinary two numbers, singular
and plural, a set of forms for two people or two things — the dual number.
Indo-European had separate forms for the dual number in the verb as well,
and these also appear in Greek and to a certain extent in Gothic. They are
not found, however, in Old English, and the distinction between the dual
and the plural was disappearing even from the pronoun in Old English.
Q: Vowel sounds of Old English.

A: The pronunciation of Old English words commonly differs somewhat


from that of their modern equivalents. The long vowels in particular have
undergone considerable modification. Old English script normally uses
sixteen consonant symbols, which in modern editions are usually
reproduced as ‘b, c, d, f, g, h, l, m, n, p, r, s, t, t, d and w’. Many of the
symbols present no difficulty: the letters ‘b, d, l, m, p, t and w’ each
represent a single phoneme which can be pronounced as in Modern
English. Old English had no symbol v: the symbol ‘f’ was used to represent
both [f] and [v]. The reason is that, in Old English, [f] and [v] were members
of the same phoneme: they were allophones.

Q- Adjectives of Middle English?

A- By 1250 the strong declension had distinctive forms for singular and
plural only in certain monosyllabic adjectives which ended in a consonant in
Old English. Under the circumstances the only ending which remained to
the adjective was often without distinctive grammatical meaning. Its use
was not governed by any strong sense of adjectival inflection. By 1250 the
strong declension had distinctive forms for singular and plural only in
certain monosyllabic adjectives which ended in a consonant in Old English.
Under the circumstances the only ending which remained to the adjective
was often without distinctive grammatical meaning. Its use was not
governed by any strong sense of adjectival inflection.

Q- Old English facts and events.

A- Key Events in the Old English Period (c.500-c.1100)

• 449 Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians began to occupy Great Britain.

• 597 Saint Augustine of Canterbury arrived in England to begin the


conversion.

• 730 The Venerable Bede produced his Ecclesiastical History of the


English People, recording the early history of the English people.
• 787 The Scandinavian invasion began with raids and in 865; they
occupied northeastern Britain and began a campaign to conquer all of
England.

• 871 Alfred became king of Wessex, retaking the city of London, securing
the kingship of all England for himself and his successors, and producing or
sponsoring the translation of Latin works into English.

• 991 The English were defeated at the Battle of Maldon.

• 1000 The manuscript of the Old English epic Beowulf was written about
this time.

• 1016 Canute became king of England, establishing a Danish dynasty in


Britain.

• 1042 The Danish dynasty ended with the death of King Hardicanute, and
Edward the Confessor became king of England.

• 1066 Edward the Confessor died and was succeeded by Harold, last of
the Anglo-Saxon kings, who died at the Battle of Hastings while fighting
against the invading army of William, duke of Normandy, who was crowned
king of England on December 25.

Q- Old English words and nouns.

A- The inflection of the Old English noun indicates distinctions of number


(singular and plural) and case. Thus the Old English noun 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 declensions.

Q- Weak and strong verb in the Middle English.

A- An occasional verb developed a strong past tense or past participle by


analogy with similar strong verbs. New verbs formed from nouns and
adjectives or borrowed from other languages were regularly conjugated as
weak. Nearly a third of the strong verbs in OE died out early in the ME
period.
Q: Five key aspects of Modern English period.

A:

• More modernized and less dialectical in written form

• Simpler inflection system

• Refined word order and prepositions

• Norman influenced spellings

• Enhanced grammar & vocabulary

Q: Difference between Synthetic and analytical languages.

A: All languages are either synthetic or analytical. A synthetic language


shows grammatical relationships through inflectional change in the words,
whereas an analytical language represents the grammatical relationships
through word order. English was once synthetic but over time has become
an analytical language.

Q: Any two experiments of origin of language. (Not sure about the


answer)

A: - The "bow-wow" hypothesis (the most famous and therefore the most
ridiculed hypothesis) holds that vocabulary developed from imitations of
animal noises, such as: Moo, bark, hiss, meow, quack-quack.

- The Natural Sound Source: The fact that all modern languages have
some words with pronunciations that seem to echo naturally occurring
sounds could be used to support this theory. It has also been suggested
that the original sounds of language may have come from natural cries of
emotion such as pain, anger, and joy. We normally produce spoken
language on exhaled breath.

Q: Syntax of Middle English.

A: Leveling of inflections resulted in syntactic and semantic relationships


that had been signaled by the endings on words – now became
ambiguous. There was a significant loss of inflections and later on, a
corresponding rigidity of word order. This is the time when we notice a shift
from a highly synthetic stage of Old English to the highly analytic stages of
Late Middle English and Modern English.

Q: Old English overall language system and prefixes and suffixes in


old English.

A: Old English exhibited a generous use of prefixes and suffixes. They


were used to form new words from old words or to modify or extend the
root idea. Prefixes in old English were a fertile resource in word building
and particularly a feature in the formation of verbs.

Q: Synchronic Linguistics.

A: Answer-1:

Synchronic Linguistics is the study of a language at a given point in time. A


synchronic approach considers a language at a moment in time without
taking its history into account. The time studied may either be the present
or a particular point in the past; synchronic analyses can also be made of
dead languages, such as Latin. Synchronic linguistics is contrasted with
diachronic linguistics (or historical linguistics), the study of a language over
a period of time.

Answer-2:

Synchrony and Diachrony are two different yet complementary viewpoints


in linguistic analysis. One can approach all different aspects of language,
such as grammar, syntax, semantics, phonology etc., from two different
points of view. Synchronic linguistics tries to understand the functioning of
language at a single point of time without reference to earlier or later
stages. Synchronic linguistics now usually precedes the study in terms of
diachronic linguistics.

Q: Physical Adaptation Source.

A: The Physical Adaptation Source: Instead of looking at types of sounds,


we can look at the types of physical features humans possess, especially
those that are distinct. Some effects of this type of change can be seen in
physical differences between the skull of a gorilla and that of a Neanderthal
man from around 60,000 years ago.

Q: Describe tone, stress and juncture.

A: Intonation involves the following:

• Pitch – how high or low a voice is when producing a sound

• Stress – how low or soft a word is spoken

• Juncture – the pauses or connections between words, phrases, and


sentences

Q: Vowel change in 12th century.

A: The Great Vowel Shift:

Beginning in the twelfth century and continuing until the eighteenth century
(but with its main effects in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries) the
sounds of the long stressed vowels in English changed their places of
articulation (i.e., how the sounds are made).

Q: Adjectives in Middle English.

A: the form of the nominative singular was early extended to all cases of the
singular. In the same way, the nominative plural to all cases of the plural is
both in the strong and the weak declensions. The result was that in the
weak declension there was no longer any distinction between the singular
and the plural: both ended in -e (blinda> blinde and blindan>blinde). This
was also true of those adjectives under the strong declension whose
singular ended in-e. By 1250 the strong declension had distinctive forms for
singular and plural only in certain monosyllabic adjectives which ended in a
consonant in Old English. Under the circumstances the only ending which
remained to the adjective was often without distinctive grammatical
meaning. Its use was not governed by any strong sense of adjectival
inflection.
Q: New stone-age.

A: Because the Stone Age was of long duration, it is customary to


distinguish between an earlier and a later period, known as the Paleolithic
(Old Stone) Age and the Neolithic (New Stone) Age. The Neolithic humans
are distinguished by a high degree of artistic skill but representations on
pieces of bone or the walls of caves tell us nothing about the language of
their designers. They possessed a superior kind of stone implement and
generally a higher culture. It was a dark race of slightly larger stature than
the Paleolithic population.

Questions without Answers

Here is a list of questions we could not find the answers to within the
handouts.

Q: Describe the Innate ability to communicate.

Q: Explain Expressiveness.

Q: Give two examples of acronyms.

Q: Describe Explicitness.

Q: Delusion of vowels and consonants.

Q: Define Art and culture of Middle English.


Q1. How did the natives of West Saxon territory treat the Anglo-Saxon? 3 marks
in the West Saxon territory, the invaders met with stubborn resistance and succeeded in
establishing themselves only after much fighting.
Q2. What were the three linguistic achievements in English language.3 marks
A Dictionary of the English Language, by Samuel Johnson, A.M. in 1755, in two folio volumes,
was hailed as a great achievement.
Q3. Briefly describe the origin of Normandy 3 marks
Normandy (French: Normandie) is a region in the northern part of France. People from
Normandy are called Normans. The name Normandy comes from the conquest and
subsequent settlement of the area by the "Northmen" (Latin: Northmanni) also called Vikings.
The band that settled at Rouen and became the Normans was led by Rollo.
Q4. Pronouns in Middle English with reference to the singular tu and plural ge.
The ‘thou’ form is used to refer to one person. However, Middle English adopted to some extent
the French tu is used as singular by those of higher social status to address those of lower social
status whereas the ‘ye/you/ ge’ form refers to more than one person as a polite or deferential
way of addressing a single person, and this usage spread; thou and thee gradually dropped out
of use in everyday speech, and finally disappeared
Q5. Write a note on literature of Middle English? 5 marks
Literature written in England during the Middle English period also reflects the times and
language choices of the times. During the time, French was the language best understood by the
upper classes, the books they read or listened to were in French. All of continental French
literature was available for their enjoyment. The literature in English that has come down to us
from this period (1150–1250) is almost exclusively religious.
Such incentives were most often found among members of the religious body, interested in
promoting right living and in the care of souls. The separation of the English nobility from France
by 1250 and the spread of English among the upper class are manifested in the next hundred years
of English literature. Types of polite literature that had hitherto appeared in French now appeared
in English. The period from 1350 to 1400 is a period of ‘Great Individual Writers.’ Geoffrey
Chaucer (1340–1400) is the greatest English poet before Shakespeare. He is famous for his The
Canterbury Tales. The general prologue of these tales provides a matchless portrait gallery of
contemporary types. The varieties of the tales provide a veritable anthology of medieval literature.
Q6. Difference between inflection and derivation. 5 marks
Inflectional morphemes are affixes which carry grammatical meaning (for example, the plural -s
in cats or progressive -ing in sailing). They do not change the part of speech or meaning of the
word; they function to ensure that the word is in the appropriate form so the sentence is
grammatically correct.
All inflectional morphemes in English are suffixes and are added after any derivational suffixes.
The most common inflectional morphemes are used in verb inflection (for example, ed in
raced, -ing in racing, -s in races) but there are suffixes for noun inflection (for example,
plural -s in horses and possessive -'s in Norma's) and adjective inflection (for example,
comparative -er in faster and superlative -est in fastest).
Derivational morphemes are affixes which are added to a lexeme to change its meaning or
function. They are used to make a new, different lexeme (for example, -ly changes the adjective
sad into the adverb sadly).
Most derivational morphemes change the part of speech, for example, -ance changes the verb
resemble into the noun resemblance. Note that the 'e' is deleted at the end of the verb resemble
when the suffix is added.
4. Facts about origin of language 5 facts......5 marks.....
Over 400 million people use the English vocabulary as a mother tongue, only surpassed in
numbers, but not in distribution by speakers of the many varieties of Chinese. Over 700 million
people speak English as a foreign language. Did you know that of all the world’s languages (over
2,700),
English is arguably the richest in vocabulary and that the Oxford English Dictionary lists about
500,000 words, and there are a half-million technical and scientific terms still uncatalogued?
Three-quarters of the world’s mail, telexes, and cables are in English.
More than half of the world’s technical and scientific periodicals are in English. English is the
medium for 80% of the information stored in the world’s computers.
English is the language of navigation and aviation.
Five of the largest broadcasting companies in the world (CBS, NBC, ABC, BBC, and CBC)
transmit in English, reaching millions and millions of people all over the world.
1.What is pitch, stress or juncture...3marks
Intonation involves the following:
• Pitch – how high or low a voice is when producing a sound
• Stress – how low or soft a word is spoken
• Juncture – the pauses or connections between words, phrases, and sentences

6. Morphological or synthetic features of middle English


A comparison of English texts written in the tenth or eleventh centuries with those produced in
the late twelth or early thirteenth reveals the following differences between Old and Middle
English:
• phonological o Old-English diphthongs become Middle English
monophthongs,
e.g. on heofonum -> in hevene;
o new diphthongs emerge in the Middle English period, e.g. dæg -> dai, day; o [f, v]
and [s, z] , which were allophones in the Old-English period, become phonemes;
o unstressed vowels in the inflectional endings become [@]
• morphological o the complete Old-English inflectional system is simplified in Middle
English; o loss of the strong inflexion of adjectives;
o loss of grammatical gender;
o emergence of the unified definite article `the.'
• syntactical o replacement of the case functions by a fixed
word order and prepositions.
• lexical o first borrowing of French loan-words; o increased
emergence of Scandinavian loan-words.
• graphological o disappearance of Old English writing
convention o increased use of Latin and Anglo-Norman.
5. Difference between synthetic and analytical languages. (5 marks) topic 33 A:
All languages are either synthetic or analytical. A synthetic language shows grammatical
relationships through inflectional change in the words, whereas an analytical language
represents the grammatical relationships through word order. English was once synthetic but
over time has become an analytical language.
Q. Write three articles of old English about domestic life 5 marks
Curtain, couch, chair, cushion, screen, lamp, lantern, chandelier, blanket, quilt, coverlet, towel,
and basin indicate articles of comfort or convenience.
2. Role of Henry V after victory in 1415
made England one of the strongest military powers in Europe. Normandy became English for
the first time in 200 years Henry V promoted the use of the English language in government[22]
and his reign marks the appearance of Chancery Standard English as well as the adoption of
English as the language of record within government. He was the first king to use English in his
personal correspondence since the Norman conquest 350 years earlier
Q. Sources of Language The Natural Sound Source: The fact that all modern languages have
some words with pronunciations that seem to echo naturally occurring sounds could be used to
support this theory. It has also been suggested that the original sounds of language may have
come from natural cries of emotion such as pain, anger, and joy. We normally produce spoken
language on exhaled breath.
The Social Interaction Source: The sounds of a person involved in physical effort, especially
when that physical effort involved interaction e.g., hums, grunts, groans. So, human sounds,
however they were produced, must have had some principled use within social interaction.
The Physical Adaptation Source: Instead of looking at types of sounds, we can look at the types
of physical features humans possess, especially those that are distinct. Some effects of this type
of change can be seen in physical differences between the skull of a gorilla and that of a
Neanderthal man from around 60,000 years ago.
The Tool-making Source: Some believe that manual gestures may have been a precursor of
language.
IMP: The Genetic Source: At birth, the baby’s brain is only a quarter of its eventual weight and
the larynx is much higher in the throat, allowing babies, like that of chimpanzees, to breathe and
drink at the same time.
6. Polialiethic (Stone Age)
Stone Age was of long duration, it is customary to distinguish between an earlier and a later
period, known as the Paleolithic (Old Stone) Age and the Neolithic (New Stone) Age. Paleolithic
humans were the earliest inhabitants of England. They were short of stature, short-legged, with
low foreheads, and poorly developed chins. They lived in the open under rock shelters or later in
caves. The humans whose remains are found in the latest Paleolithic strata are distinguished by a
high degree of artistic skill but representations on pieces of bone or the walls of caves tell us
nothing about the language of their designers. ‘Neolithic’ is likewise a convenient rather than
scientific term. They possessed a superior kind of stone implement and generally a higher culture.
It was a dark race of slightly larger stature than the Paleolithic population.
1. Discuss the impact of science and technology on English language. (3 marks) topic 40
from video lecture.
Media and technology brings the world together and one can see English has emerged to be a
common language used in the field of media and technology.
2. After the rise of middle class what happened to English language. Discuss briefly
Since importance of a language largely depends upon the importance of people who speak it;
with the rise of middle class English also had uplift in its status as their language.
English and England difference.
A: From the beginning, writers in the vernacular never called their language anything but
Englisc (English). The word is derived from the name of the Angles (OE Engle) but is used
without distinction for the language of all the invading tribes. From about the year 1000, the
name England (land of the Angles) began to be used in place of Angelcynn. The name English
is thus older than the name England.
Define Diachronic linguistics..3 marks
Diachronic linguistics is the scientific study of language change over time. It’s also called
historical linguistics. Principal concerns include: to describe and account for observed changes
in particular languages. Diachronic linguistics is the study of language through different periods
in history. It maps the shifts, fractures, and mutations of languages over the centuries. In gross
outline, it is similar to evolutionary biology which maps the shifts and transformations of rocks.
5. Five features of language
1. Displacement: It is the ability to talk about times, places, and people other than the ‘here
and now’: to say things which we know to be false.
2. Arbitrariness: There is no ‘natural’ connection between a linguistic form and its meaning.
3. Productivity: This is the ability to continually create new expressions and novel utterances.
Creativity or open-endedness means that the potential number of utterances in any human
language is infinite.
4. Cultural Transmission: We may inherit brown eyes and dark hair but we do not inherit
language. We acquire a language in a culture.
5. Duality: Human language is organized at two levels or layers simultaneously. We have a
physical level at which we can produce individual sounds, like n, b and I, but beyond this
we can organize a variety of sentences.
6. What are the two kinds of Celts?(3 marks)
Gaelic or Goidelic branch and the Brythonic branch. Celtic was probably the first Indo-
European tongue to be spoken in England.
Q3. What is the difference between consonants of old English and Modern English?
Old English script normally uses sixteen consonant symbols, which in modern editions are
usually reproduced as ‘b, c, d, f, g, h, l, m, n, p, r, s, t, t, d and w’. Many of the symbols present
no difficulty: the letters ‘b, d, l, m, p, t and w’ each represent a single phoneme which can be
pronounced as in Modern English. Old English had no symbol v: the symbol ‘f’ was used to
represent both [f] and [v]. The reason is that, in Old English, [f] and [v] were members of the
same phoneme: they were allophones.
Q4. Discuss the effects of Norman Conquest on English language. (5 marks)
The Norman Conquest greatly influenced the English language regarding pronunciation,
vocabulary and grammar. It also had an impact on the loss of most Old English inflection during
this period. The mixture of the two cultures and the two languages came to be known as the
Middle English. The changes in the vocabulary involved the loss of a large part of the Old English
vocabulary and the addition of many words from French.
i. The changes in English grammar are defined as a reduction of inflections.
For Example
In Old English, the word order was Adjective + Noun, some expressions like Royal Prince,
changed into Old French pattern of placing a noun before its describing adjective like Prince
Royal. Although nominal, there is evidence for French influence on English word order.
ii. French influence on the vocabulary
The French influence is observable on the English vocabulary. Many French words and idioms
were introduced into English and are still used. As Normans started governing the churches and
the courts of London the change first occurred in the courts and religious services, so these places
were influenced first.
For example
The largest single group among the words that were introduced in early was linked with the
Christianity and church, where Normans took charge of the clergy ship (service, trinity, savior,
virgin, angle etc.).
Words like state, royal (roial), exil (exile), army (armee), navy (navie), enemy (enemi), and more
were joint in. French words were borrowed in English because of the ruling class and their fusion.
iii. French influence on spelling
A significant change in spellings took place for the sake of clarity. Old English ‘u’ changed as
‘ou’, for example, hus (house) as hous (ow when final).

Q4. Features of noun in Middle English?


In early Middle English, only two methods of indicating the plural remained fairly
distinctive. At that time, it was difficult to predict that the ‘-s’ would become the almost universal
sign of the plural that it has become. Until the thirteenth century, the ‘-en’ plural enjoyed great
favor in the south, being often added to nouns which had not belonged to the weak declension in
Old English. But in the rest of England, the -s plural (and genitive singular) of the old first
declension (masculine) was apparently felt to be so distinctive that it spread rapidly. Fifty years
later, it had conquered the rest of the Midlands, and by the 14th century, it had definitely been
accepted all over.
Write a note on the black death 5 marks
It was in the summer of 1348 that in the Southwest of England, first case of this plague was
reported. These were the first cases of a disease that in its contagiousness and fatality exceeded
anything previously known. The Black Death spread rapidly over the rest of the country,
reaching its height in 1349.40 percent of the parish clergy died of the plague. Death rate during
the plague approximated 30 percent. The effects of so great a calamity were naturally serious.
Mortality was greatest among the lower social orders. The question arises why mortality was
greatest among the lower social orders? The answer is simple: it happened because their life
style was poor, hygiene conditions were bad and affordability to medicine was very low. The
result of these deaths was a labor shortage which consequently gave rise to increase in wages.
Impact of the Black Death
A general spirit of discontent prevailed. It culminated in the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381.
There was an increase in the economic importance of the laboring class. There was also an
increase in the importance of the English language which they spoke. This also led to the rise of
the craftsmen and the merchant class. By 1250, there had grown up in England about two hundred
towns with populations from 1,000 to 5,000; some like London or York were larger. These towns
became free, self-governing communities, electing their own officers, assessing taxes in their own
way, trying their own cases, and regulating their commercial affairs. They were engaged in trade
or in the manufacturing of crafts. Each town was independent, wealthy, and powerful standing
halfway between the rural peasant and the aristocracy. Such changes in the social and economic
life benefited particularly the English speaking part of the population.
Facts and Figures about English Language
Over 400 million people use the English vocabulary as a mother tongue, only surpassed in
numbers, but not in distribution by speakers of the many varieties of Chinese. Over 700 million
people speak English as a foreign language. Did you know that of all the world’s languages (over
2,700), English is arguably the richest in vocabulary and that the Oxford English Dictionary lists
about 500,000 words, and there are a half-million technical and scientific terms still un-
catalogued?
Three-quarters of the world’s mail, telexes, and cables are in English. More than half of the
world’s technical and scientific periodicals are in English. English is the medium for 80% of the
information stored in the world’s computers. English is the language of navigation and aviation.
Five of the largest broadcasting companies in the world (CBS, NBC, ABC, BBC, and CBC)
transmit in English, reaching millions and millions of people all over the world.

Q Why we should study History of English? Give reasons


History Helps Us Understand People and Societies.
Some knowledge of the roots of a language can sometimes help you understand the origin of a
word.
Thirdly, some knowledge of the history of the English language will help you understand the
rich variety of English literature that is available.
Q5. Why Urdu was not made the only official language?(3 marks)
All documentation was in English Language. For first 30 years this controversy went one. 1978
all schools were instructed to teach urdu as medium. However schools continued to teach
English. People who were in power continued to learn and interact in English. Because there
wasn’t any proper planning in bringing urdu result was that English is used in official domains
also the elite class . Urdu is currently 2012 is a national language. However, it couldn’t get a
real status of official language.
Q. Role of media in future development of English language 5 marks
Radio and motion pictures vs. telephone. Such additions to the vocabulary depend more upon the
degree to which the discovery or invention enters into the life of the community. The same
principle might be illustrated by film, radio, and television. Cinema and moving picture (1899),
screen, reel, film, scenario, projector, close-up, fade-out are now common, and although the
popularity of 3-D as a cinematic effect was short lived, the word is still used.
• broadcast (itself), aerial, antenna, lead-in, loudspeaker, stand by, and solid-state etc.
• Words like microphone, and transmitter have acquired special meanings.
There were also new meanings of read, write, mouse, terminal, chip, network, workstation,
windows, and virus.

Q. Importance of London Standard*


By far, the most influential factor in the rise of Standard English was the importance of London
as the capital of England.
Importance of London Standard was due to certain reasons: London was, and still is: • The
political capital of England
• Commercial center of England
• Seat of the court of the highest judicial tribunals
• Focus of the social and intellectual activities London economy was especially important as
‘an engine of communication and exchange,’ which enabled ideas and information to be
distributed and business to be done. The Spread of the London Standard In the latter part of
the fifteenth century, the London standard had been accepted, at least in writing, in most parts
of the country. Introduction of printing in 1476 was a reason and a new influence of great
importance in the dissemination of London English. London was the center of book
publishing. Caxton, the first English printer, used the current speech of London. In the
sixteenth century, the use of London English had become a matter of principle as well as
practice.
The process of development can be seen in the Peterborough Chronicle. Peterborough
Chronicle was written in installments from 1070 to 1154.

1. Discuss the impact of science and technology on English language. (3 marks) topic 40 from
video lecture
2. After the rise of middle class what happened to English language. Discuss briefly.(3 marks)
tropic 75
3. Describe the language property of arbitrariness.(3 marks) topic 2
4. Write 5 facts about English language present in your course.( 5 marks) topic 19
5. Difference between synthetic and analytical languages. (5 marks) topic 33
6. Discuss the effects of Norman conquest on English language. ( 5 marks) topic 67 to 69
7. Describe Explictiness?
A- Explicitness dictates that you should be clear about the assumptions proven or unproven on
which study is based.
2
8. Explain Expressiveness.
A- According to my understanding its the use words, phrases, gestures in written or spoken
language. in case of written this is added by metaphors and idioms whereas in spoken body
language, and intonation plays a vital role
9. Define Art and culture of Middle English.
A-The Middle English period (1150–1500). This was the time around loss of Normandy. to me
logically the answer is: Lots of literature was translated from french to English. People were
learning and inclining towards learning French as L2 keeping English as L1.
10. Q: Describe the Innate ability to communicate.
The human brain is hard wired to communicate. According to Chomsky Language learning
abilities are built-in in human minds
11. Q: Give two examples of acronyms.
WWW: World Wide Web
ATM: Automated teller Machine.
12. What is the delusion (means difference) between vowel and consonants?
A- Vowel sound is made fairly open from the mouth. For example "a". Where as Consonant is
fairly closed sound that is "m". So vowels are sounds
3
produced by open configuration of vocal tract without audible friction. But consonants are
produced in which sound is produced.
13. Define Anglicism?
A- An **Anglicism** is a word or construction borrowed from English into another language.
For example words like computer and internet are borrowed from English in other languages.

Grammar change in Middle English (3)


Physical adaptation theory (3)
English and England which one is old and why. 3 marks
3 achievements of modern Linguistics (3)
Change in grammar in the middle age (3)
Who are Anglo Saxon (3)
French in 14th century (3)
Describe diachronic
Phonology features in Middle English
Vowels in old English
Pronoun in Middle English
Pitch, juncture, stress
King jam and pheohea
English in post Pakistan,
Media roll in English development,
English in 14th century.
Who support English in the 13 century?
Fact on Middle English Normandy loss?
Features of noun in old English
Difference between inflection and derivation
Features of Displacement (3)
Role of Science & Technology in spread of English (3)
Change occur at word level in language
Role of media in development of English
Impact of loss of Normandy,
Why Upper class used French
Difference between the Vowel Declension and The consonant
Representation of literature during the Middle English period 3 marks
How much speech of Angels different from that of Saxons or that of Jutes (3 marks)
Features of displacement 3 marks
What are the two linguistics achievements of old English?
New objectives;*Date of Chaucer's Canterbury and * year of WW1
What is the characteristics of literature written in England during the Middle English
period?
What is the feature of duality in English? Discuss briefly
Discuss major reasons of fusion and diffusion of French and English during 1066-1200? 5
marks
Elaborate the role of media in future developments of English language? 5 marks
5 aspects of late modern English 5 marks
What did Barton write in his book (5 marks)
Neolithic age 5 marks
Normandy Middle English (5)
Describe overall language system of Old English and role of Prefixes and suffixes
Words of American and British English (5 words for each)
Note on old English language system
What is old English and note on suffixes and affixes? (5)
What are the experiments of the pharaoh and King James of Scotland about the original
language? (5)
Compare the old English single consonant with modern English consonant? (5)
Why did Normans adopt the French civilization? (5)
Pronouns in Middle English (5)
ye-ho-he theory (5)
What are aspects of late modern English? 5 marks
Write a note on Neolithic (old stone) 5marks
Name five origin of English (5)
Role of media in future development of English (5)
Status of Latin in 15th century
Impacts of Black Death. 5 marks

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