How did English evolve? - Kate Gardoqui

1,368,960 views ・ 2012-11-27

TED-Ed


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

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Translator: Andrea McDonough Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
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I am going to start with a challenge.
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I want you to imagine each of these two scenes
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in as much detail as you can.
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Scene number one:
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"They gave us a hearty welcome."
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Well, who are the people who are giving a hearty welcome?
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What are they wearing?
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What are they drinking?
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OK, scene two:
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"They gave us a cordial reception."
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How are these people standing?
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What expressions are on their faces?
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What are they wearing and drinking?
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Fix these pictures in your mind's eye
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and then jot down a sentence or two to describe them.
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We'll come back to them later.
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Now on to our story.
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In the year 400 C.E.
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the Celts in Britain were ruled by Romans.
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This had one benefit for the Celts:
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the Romans protected them from the barbarian Saxon tribes
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of Northern Europe.
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But then the Roman Empire began to crumble,
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and the Romans withdrew from Britain.
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With the Romans gone, the Germanic tribes,
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the Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians
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quickly sailed across the water,
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did away with the Celts,
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and formed kingdoms in the British Isles.
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For several centuries, these tribes lived in Britain,
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and their Germanic language, Anglo Saxon,
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became the common language, what we call Old English.
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Although modern English speakers may think Old English sounds like a different language,
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if you look and listen closely, you'll find many words that are recognizable.
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For example, here is what the Lord's Prayer looks like in Old English.
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At first glance, it may look unfamiliar,
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but update the spelling a bit,
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and you'll see many common English words.
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So the centuries passed with Britains happily speaking Old English,
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but in the 700's, a series of Viking invasions began,
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which continued until a treaty split the island in half.
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On one side were the Saxons.
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On the other side were the Danes
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who spoke a language called Old Norse.
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As Saxons fell in love with their cute Danish neighbors
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and marriages blurred the boundaries,
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Old Norse mixed with Old English,
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and many Old Norse words like
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freckle,
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leg,
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root,
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skin,
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and want
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are still a part of our language.
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300 years later, in 1066,
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the Norman conquest brought war again to the British Isles.
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The Normans were Vikings who settled in France.
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They had abandoned the Viking language and culture
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in favor of a French lifestyle,
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but they still fought like Vikings.
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They placed a Norman king on the English throne
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and for three centuries, French was the language of the British royalty.
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Society in Britain came to have two levels:
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French-speaking aristocracy
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and Old English-speaking peasants.
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The French also brought many Roman Catholic clergymen with them
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who added Latin words to the mix.
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Old English adapted and grew
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as thousands of words flowed in,
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many having to do with government, law, and aristocracy.
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Words like council,
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marriage,
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sovereign,
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govern,
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damage,
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and parliament.
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As the language expanded,
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English speakers quickly realized what to do
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if they wanted to sound sophisticated:
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they would use words that had come from French or Latin.
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Anglo Saxon words seemed so plain
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like the Anglo Saxon peasants who spoke them.
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Let's go back to the two sentences you thought about earlier.
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When you pictured the hearty welcome,
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did you see an earthy scene with relatives hugging and talking loudly?
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Were they drinking beer?
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Were they wearing lumberjack shirts and jeans?
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And what about the cordial reception?
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I bet you pictured a far more classy and refined crowd.
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Blazers and skirts,
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wine and caviar.
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Why is this?
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How is it that phrases that are considered just about synonymous by the dictionary
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can evoke such different pictures and feelings?
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"Hearty" and "welcome" are both Saxon words.
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"Cordial" and "reception" come from French.
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The connotation of nobility and authority has persisted
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around words of French origin.
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And the connotation of peasantry,
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real people,
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salt of the Earth,
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has persisted around Saxon words.
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Even if you never heard this history before,
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the memory of it persists in the feelings evoked
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by the words you speak.
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On some level, it's a story you already knew
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because whether we realize it consciously
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or only subconsciously,
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our history lives in the words we speak and hear.
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