Discover the History of English

2,691,086 views ・ 2016-04-14

Learn English with Gill


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Hello. I'm Gill from engVid,
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and today... As you know, I usually teach an aspect of the English language,
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but today, we're going to be looking at the English language from
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a different perspective, a different angle, and looking at the history of the language
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and how it has developed, because the English language hasn't always been the way it is today.
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It's developed over hundreds and hundreds of years.
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Now, today, hundreds of millions of people speak English all over the world, whether
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it's their first language or their second language, or just one of the foreign languages
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that they speak and learn at school, and so on. So, hundreds of millions of people speak
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English and learn English. But hundreds of years ago, the English language that we know
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today didn't really exist. It sort of got put together gradually by different historical
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events. So we're going to go back in history now, and have a look at a timeline.
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I don't know if you've seen a timeline before, but it is literally the time, the years going
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from left to right, like you get on a graph if you've done graphs, and the time goes across
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along the line. So the different developments that happened can be shown on that line. So
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we're starting here in 55 BC, hundreds of years ago, and we're coming up to... Well, beyond.
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We have 1066, here, but because I ran out of space on the board, the time went
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on for such a long time, I couldn't get all the centuries in, but I will still tell you
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about them. Okay. But these are the very interesting parts, which are on the board.
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So, 55 BC, the Roman invasion of Britain, of the U.K., where we are at the moment.
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So, you've heard of the Roman Empire with Julius Caesar and all the other Caesars, the Roman
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Empire that spread in different directions, and Britain is one of the directions they
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spread in. They came here, and stayed for a while, and built some nice buildings, and
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they built a wall that goes across between Scotland and England, called Hadrian's Wall,
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because the Emperor at the time was called Hadrian. So, anyway, when they came and stayed
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for some time, they brought their language with them, the Latin language. Okay? And the
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Latin language, it's called a dead language today, but it has influenced so many other
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languages, especially in Southern Europe,
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so languages like Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, they all come from Latin.
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So, in this country, in the English language,
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we have had the Latin influence at different times. So, the Romans brought their Latin
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language with them. Okay? So that influenced the way people were speaking to each other
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as time went on. And the natives of this country started learning Latin words, and it became
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integrated into the language.
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Okay, so let's have a look at some of the words that we use today that were influenced
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or that came from Latin words. Right? And we have this pie chart, here, which you may
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know if you've been studying things for IELTS and the writing task. A pie chart... So, the
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whole circle represents 100%. So if you're thinking of all the words in the English language
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at the moment, Latin, the Latin words that came from... Partly from the Roman invasion,
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we have 29% of the words in the English language have come from a Latin origin, from a source,
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Latin source. Okay. So here are just a few of very words that we use every day, really.
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Words like: "human", "animal", "dental" to do with the teeth, "decimal" which is to do
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with the fingers because we have 10 fingers, "decimal", and "digital", also fingers, "factory"
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where things are made, manufacture, "library" where you read books, "libre" meaning book,
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"library", the building where the books are kept, "manual" to do with if you do things
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with your hand it comes from the Latin word for "hand", "manual". "Lunar" to do with the
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moon, because the Latin word for the moon was "luna", "luna".
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And "solar" to do with the sun, again, because the Latin word was like that, "solar".
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"Military", anything to do with soldiers because the Latin
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Roman Empire soldiers were... That was the word that was
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used for "soldiers". "Melees" I think. And we also get our "mile", the distance, the
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mile from that, because that was the distance that they would march, I think, before they
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had a rest or something like that. So "military" is to do with soldiers. "Science" to do with
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knowledge. "Science", and "station", the railway station, the bus station is a place where
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you stand still before you move off, and that also comes from a Latin word to be static
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in one place. Okay. Okay, so that's the Latin. You'll notice also that later on in history,
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Latin kept coming back, so there and there, but that's the Latin from these three points
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in history when we had visitors of one sort or another.
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Okay, so let's move on then, the next major event. I've put 450 AD, but I'm going to start
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putting century numbers now, because it's simpler. So, 5th... The 5th century, okay,
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Germanic migration. That's people from roughly where Germany is today in the mainland Europe
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moved across. Okay? From the Saxon, Saxon area of Germany. Saxony. So, the language
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they brought with them was a kind of... Well, it became Anglo-Saxon, because it got merged
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with the English we already had, the Anglo part, with the Saxon part added. It... And
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that's another name for that is Old English, Old English, which looks totally different
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from the English we have today. So they brought a different language with them, and that got
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all mixed in. If you think of a big cooking pot and different ingredients being put in,
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and it just keeps cooking and cooking over time, that's how it was developing. Okay.
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So, Germanic. Let's have a look at how much Germanic language there is in English today.
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So, looking at our pie chart again, we've got Germanic 26%, so just over a quarter of
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the words in the English language today come from a Germanic source. And I've put some
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little abbreviations here; Old English, Middle English, Old Norse, and Dutch.
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These are all roughly sort of from the Germanic area,
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and the Dutch words as well are all mixed in there, too,
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because Holland isn't that far away either.
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Okay. So, let's just see a few examples of
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the Germanic words. They're often quite short words and words we use every day, like "above",
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"again", "and", "apple", "bad" and "good",
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"cake", "eat" and "drink",
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parts of the body especially, "eye" and "feet" and "arm", "boy" and "girl",
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these are all the Germanic type of words.
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"House", "hand", "bread", so parts of the body. "Food", all of that kind of thing.
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Okay, so that's that one.
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So moving on, in the 6th century, before this, we had been what you call a Pagan country,
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sort of pre-Christianity. In the 6th century, Saint Augustine came and started converting
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people to Christianity. Okay. And that meant bringing languages with him, like the Bible
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that was written in these different languages, other books, books of learning. So, again,
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Latin came in. And Greek as well came in, and Hebrew all came with the Christianity,
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which spread around the whole country. So we've covered Latin already. Let's just have
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a look at Greek in our pie chart to see how much influence that has had on the language
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today. So looking at Greek, it's actually quite small, just 6%.
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But they're very sort of... They're kind of words that are used in a sort of academic life,
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and the word "academic" itself is one of them; "academic" is a Greek word.
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And "Android", if you have an Android
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mobile phone, you wouldn't believe that it had come from an old Greek word, but it has.
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"Android". Okay? A word like "basic", "cinema" even, "climate", "democracy", "economy", "geography",
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"history", "idea" because philosophy, thinking, ideas is very important
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and had a big... Greece had a big influence on that.
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"Politics" and "technology" all come from Greek.
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Okay, Hebrew, we don't have unless it's included under other one of the other influences which
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is another 6%.
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Okay, so moving on to a period when we had some more invasions and it wasn't
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the Romans this time, it was people called the Vikings who came from Scandinavian countries,
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so that's Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and they came across the sea and invaded. And it wasn't
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just one invasion; it happened over three centuries, from the 8th to the 11th century.
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So the Viking invasions, and they brought their Scandinavian languages with them.
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And Old Norse is one of them. And as I said earlier, from this Germanic migration, this was another
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sort of input into the Germanic types of languages that we have. That's why we've got 26% because
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there was such a lot coming in, a lot of words, there. Okay. Right.
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So, moving on again to the... This is 11th century as well, 1066, which is a big date
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in English history. The Norman invasion. And if you know the area called Normandy in Northern France,
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there's a connection, there. So, the Normans were French, and they invaded... They
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came across the channel, they had a big battle near the south coast of Britain, and they
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won so they took over. So the Norman invasion, that brought French for the first time and
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some more Latin again, because anyway, French developed from Latin, so it was a mixture
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of that. But French for the first time, their French that had developed from Latin,
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as well as Latin itself.
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So, let's have a look at some of the words we use in English today that came from French sources.
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Okay. So, food, French people love food and a lot of words for food came in.
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So: "beef", "pork" and "veal" all come from French words. Okay?
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But then some other interesting words that maybe were Latin originally,
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but they became French, and then these French
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words came into English and they're still with us today,
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words like: "continue", "liberty",
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"justice", so a lot of legal language, words to do with the law come from French.
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So "liberty", "justice". "Journey", if you go on a trip, a journey comes from a French word.
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"People" comes from a French word for people. And even the little word "very".
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When you say: "Oh, that's very nice", "very" just is the French word for true,
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so it means "truly", "truly nice". That is truly nice, that is very nice.
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So, a little word like "very" comes from the French word for "true". Okay.
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Right, so we've covered Latin, French, Germanic, and Greek. And we've come up to 1066, but
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of course, the English language didn't stop developing then. As I said, I ran out of space.
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But other things happened, for example, in the 15th century, 16th century, people started
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exploring the world, going off in ships and finding other countries, finding places like
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America that they didn't know was there before; Christopher Columbus. Also going the other
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way, and at the Portuguese, for example, found India and China. So, people explored. So,
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from the English point of view, we had explorers who went off and found things, and came back,
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and that also influenced the language because, for example, we got tobacco and potatoes from
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America, so the words for those things were new. Okay.
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And then 18th, 19th century, colonialism, British Empire, Britain became involved politically
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in other countries, then eventually the British Empire ended and we now have the Commonwealth
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instead. And now in the 20th, 21st century, the language is still developing. We've got
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the internet, the speed of travel. It's very easy to get on a plane and travel thousands
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of miles and go to another country, so words keep coming back from other countries, for example.
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So looking at from the British Empire onwards, a lot of Asian words, words from
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the Middle East and the far east, like "balcony" and "bangle", a bangle that you wear around your
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wrist, "bangle". A "bungalow", that's a house which is only one storey,
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a bungalow. We have quite a lot of those in this country.
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A "guru" from India, someone who you go to for advice
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and help, "guru". A "kiosk", "pajamas" that you wear in bed at night to sleep in, "pajamas"
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are from an empire country. "Sandals" that you wear on your feet, sandals with spaces
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in between for hot weather. And even "shampoo" that you wash your hair with, "shampoo" is
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a foreign word from one of the empire countries.
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And finally... So, we were talking about the internet and technology. If you're doing the
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housework and hoovering the carpet, we also say vacuuming the carpet because you use a
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vacuum cleaner, but one of the major brands of vacuum cleaner is the Hoover, and that
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was the name of the maker, the Hoover. So, but that word has now become a verb "to hoover",
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and "hoovering". Okay? So, names count for about 4% in the English language, so Hoover,
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and more recently, Google; we all use Google, and now there is a verb "to Google",
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so I am googling something. So... No, sorry, not like that, that's hoovering.
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I'm googling something. So those are just two examples of names that are now part of the English
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language, and it's changing all the time still. So... But it's a fascinating language to study,
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as I hope you agree.
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So, I hope that's been interesting for you, a bit of history.
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And there is a quiz on the website, www.engvid.com,
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so I hope you'll go and give that a try.
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And so that's all for today.
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But come back soon, and we'll have another lesson for you. Okay?
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Thank you. Bye.
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