ENG501 Midterm Subjective Paper
ENG501 Midterm Subjective Paper
ENG501 Midterm Subjective Paper
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.
A- French was the language of lawyers and the law courts down to 1362.
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- c.500 to c.1100
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.
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.
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.
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).
Answer-2:
French being so long the mark of the privileged class was and is still:
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.
• It has assumptions:
A: They did not cultivate English, though had acquaintance with it.
The reason was that their activities in England did not necessitate it.
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: Define Morpheme.
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.
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.
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.
• 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.
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.
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- 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.
• 449 Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians began to occupy Great Britain.
• 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.
• 1000 The manuscript of the Old English epic Beowulf was written about
this time.
• 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.
A:
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: Synchronic Linguistics.
A: Answer-1:
Answer-2:
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).
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.
Here is a list of questions we could not find the answers to within the
handouts.
Q: Explain Expressiveness.
Q: Describe Explicitness.
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.