West African languages
introduced through the
slave trade (America)
The "Age of
Reason/Enlightenment"
had begun
leading to an impact on
religious language
S. Johnson
Dictionary - 1755
Industrial Revolution
fundamental
changes were
made
neologisms because
of: science & tech,
cities & factories,
new inventions
fashion
food
leisure
medicine
chemistry
psychology
Prescriptivism
a strict set of rules that
identify correct &
incorrect use of
language
Romanticism movement
Artistic, literary &
intellectual movement
A reaction to the Industrial Revolution.
Also a revolt against the social & political
norms of the Age of Enlightenment and
against the scientific rationalism of nature
Major impact on historiography,
education and natural sciences
POLITICS:
Associated
with
LIBERALISM
&
RADICALISM
Emphasis on emotions like
APPREHENSION,
HORROR & TERROR
Elevated folk art and
ancient customs to a
noble status
Gothic romance
Edgar Allan Poe (US)
Mary Shelley
Charlotte/Emily Bronte
Classic movement (Neoclassicism)
Decorative & visual arts,
literature, theatre, music AND
architecture
Drew inspiration from
"classical" art of Ancient
Greece and/or Rome
Competed with
romanticism
GRAMMAR
non-finite
clauses
added to
formality
Transitive
constructions
"SO" was an
intensifier(?)
Lots of semantic shifts
Early Modern English
RENAISSANCE
voyages of
discovery
(chocolate)
discoveries of
science
(pneumonia,
vacuum)
new
inventions
(thermometer)
development in
philosophy and politics
(chaos, argument,
probability, critic)
between 10,000 & 12,000 new words
appeared (from alligator to yoghurt)
CAXTON'S
PRINTING PRESS,
1476
Words were starting to become
standardised because of national
printing
LEXIS
Many words
were "rejected"
(e.g.
illecebrous,
unconsellable)
Word order is still varied
narrowing, broadening,
amelioration and
pejoration
GRAMMMAR
Only regular noun inflection -s
modal auxiliary 'shall' used for
all people (instead of 'will')