Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part one Theory and methodology: approaches to studying the standardisation of English
- Part two Processes of the standardisation of English
- 7 Standardisation and the language of early statutes
- 8 Scientific language and spelling standardisation 1375–1550
- 9 Change from above or from below? Mapping the loci of linguistic change in the history of Scottish English
- 10 Adjective comparison and standardisation processes in American and British English from 1620 to the present
- 11 The Spectator, the politics of social networks, and language standardisation in eighteenth-century England
- 12 A branching path: low vowel lengthening and its friends in the emerging standard
- Index
8 - Scientific language and spelling standardisation 1375–1550
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part one Theory and methodology: approaches to studying the standardisation of English
- Part two Processes of the standardisation of English
- 7 Standardisation and the language of early statutes
- 8 Scientific language and spelling standardisation 1375–1550
- 9 Change from above or from below? Mapping the loci of linguistic change in the history of Scottish English
- 10 Adjective comparison and standardisation processes in American and British English from 1620 to the present
- 11 The Spectator, the politics of social networks, and language standardisation in eighteenth-century England
- 12 A branching path: low vowel lengthening and its friends in the emerging standard
- Index
Summary
Aim and outline of this study
The aim of this article is to assess spellings in scientific writing c.1375–1550 in relation to the incipient standardisation of spelling in some Central Midlands text types and the spread of the national standard spelling system. I approach the topic from a sociolinguistic point of view, taking into account the sociohistorical setting of the time and its nationalistic language policy. The language of science formed a new register in English during this period, widening the functions of the vernacular to the prestige area of learning; the conventions of writing science were transferred from authoritative Greco-Roman models. The vernacularisation process started in the latter half of the fourteenth century and continued to the seventeenth century. Thus it coincides with the process of language standardisation, as the period from 1400 to 1660 was concerned with the establishment of a written standard throughout the country (Blake 1996: 12).
This article claims that the form of the new register of scientific writing was a conscious choice, both distinct and influential. This language variety is known as the Central Midland Standard in the literature, and it has mainly been associated with Wycliffite writings. In the present paper it will be referred to as the Central Midland spelling system in scientific texts, as this is a more precise label for the features considered here. The empirical part of this study proves that Central Midland spellings were widely disseminated in scientific writing and continued in use in the late fifteenth century.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Development of Standard English, 1300–1800Theories, Descriptions, Conflicts, pp. 131 - 154Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
- 10
- Cited by