Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: modern British culture
- 1 Becoming British
- 2 Language developments in British English
- 3 Schooling and culture
- 4 The changing character of political communications
- 5 Contemporary Britain and its regions
- 6 Contemporary British cinema
- 7 Contemporary British fiction
- 8 Contemporary British poetry
- 9 Theatre in modern British culture
- 10 Contemporary British television
- 11 British art in the twenty-first century
- 12 British fashion
- 13 Sport in contemporary Britain
- 14 British sexual cultures
- 15 British popular music, popular culture and exclusivity
- 16 British newspapers today
- 17 The struggle for ethno-religious equality in Britain: the place of the Muslim community
- Guide to further reading
- Index
2 - Language developments in British English
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: modern British culture
- 1 Becoming British
- 2 Language developments in British English
- 3 Schooling and culture
- 4 The changing character of political communications
- 5 Contemporary Britain and its regions
- 6 Contemporary British cinema
- 7 Contemporary British fiction
- 8 Contemporary British poetry
- 9 Theatre in modern British culture
- 10 Contemporary British television
- 11 British art in the twenty-first century
- 12 British fashion
- 13 Sport in contemporary Britain
- 14 British sexual cultures
- 15 British popular music, popular culture and exclusivity
- 16 British newspapers today
- 17 The struggle for ethno-religious equality in Britain: the place of the Muslim community
- Guide to further reading
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Languages do not change at a steady pace. They reflect the developments that take place in the culture of which they form a part. Some events in English history had immediate and dramatic linguistic consequences, such as the huge influence of French on English vocabulary and spelling after the Norman Conquest, or the even greater influx of loan words from European languages during the Renaissance, which virtually doubled the size of the English word stock. At other times, the pace of linguistic change was relatively slow, such as during the eighteenth century, where the desire for order and stability was reflected in the publication of the first major dictionaries, grammars and pronunciation manuals of the language. Today, we are experiencing a new period of rapid and widespread language change, but not for any one particular reason; rather, a range of social, economic and technological factors have combined to make the decades on either side of the millennium linguistically quite extraordinary.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Modern British Culture , pp. 26 - 41Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
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