Demand for
grammatical languages
e.g. Latin fell, emphasis
on modern english.
Industrial rev 1780
onwards, shift from
agriculture to
industry.
1755 Johnson's dictionary, took 8 yrs, until
Oxford English Dictionary, was viewed as
pre-eminent english dictionary.
Great importance
in standardisation
of spelling.
OED
published
over 150 yrs
later.
Also gave phonological
information.
Had social prestige,
most words included
quote from most
prestigious authors.
Non-standard caps of nouns
generally died out in C18.
Lowth's Short
introduction to
English grammar,
standardising
grammar, 1762.
Lowth and Johnson -
early prescriptivists.
1800's
Long S, derived from roman cursive,
generally fell out of use late C19, rarely found
in good quality London printing after 1800,
although lingered provincially for a while.
'Ye' died out
C19, fully
replaced by the.
Social.
Late C19, invention of telephone,
communication changes.
Abolition of
slavery 1807.
Huge gap between
wealthy and poor,
distinct social classes.
1848 - Communist
manifesto, Marx & Engels.
Improvement of
communication ont transport,
rail, canal, steam ships allowed
goods to be transported rapidly,
facilitating trade and industry.
British Empire causes
huge lexical growth.
Many movements to obtain
greater rights for women, Married
Woman's Property act introduced.
Noteable literature, Dickens,
Brontes, Jane Austen, Mary
Shelley - Frankenstein.
1816, Pickering compiled first
dictionary of americanisms.
First thesaurus
created C19.
1820s, grammar and
punctuation books for children.
1900's
WW1 1914-1918, WW2
1939-1945.
War & army brought with
it new lexicon.
After WW2 high immigration from India,
Pakistan & Caribbean, new cultures and lexis
came with.
Women.
Sex discrimination act 1975, work, education and training.
Suffragette movement, women got vote 1928.
1970 equal pay act passed.
Tech.
1914, first mass produced
motor car, they gained
great popularity in C20.
1973, first
mobile phone.
Text speak begins late C20.
Numeronym - number used to form abbreviation
e.g. gr8 (not in initialisms and acronyms).
1975, first personal
computer.
Much new lexis introduced to
language. Many initialisms and
acronyms.
60s youth-based
sub-sultures became
prevalent.
80s Political correctness,
avoiding offence.
Sales of Good act, 1979 legislation - advertising must be accurate.
2000's
Social Networking & further
technological advances, most
people have phone/smart
phone and pc.
Global communication through social media, lead to coining of
much new slang, spread through internet.
Popularisation of Blackberry (first
BB smart phone 2003) - QWERTY
keyboard, no longer a need for
some text speak.
Emoticons, 2011, Apple
introduced Emoji keyboard,
Emoticons lost popularity.
Earlier
1476 - Caxton introduced printing press.
Standardized to some extent due to
country having wide range of very
different dialects, by homogenising
regional dislects to South East, as this
was most influential area at time.
Began standardising
spelling, and homogenising
a variety of english dialects.
By C17, books generally cheaper,
literacy rates increasing, however
predominantly elite classes still.
Between 14th century and 18th
century, Great Vowl Shift, meaning
vowels were no longer 'phonetic'.
Pronunciation of english
began to stabilise.
Shakespeare writing around late
16th century to early 17th, brought
over 1700 new words into language.
1693, first woman's
magazine published.
Increase in international
trade C17, increase in word
borrowings.
Æ, þ, ȝ, Ash, Thorn and Yogh used in old english,
generally disappeared as popularity of printing rose.