does English actually come from England? (surprising!)

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  • Опубліковано 2 лип 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 222

  • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
    @GirlGoneLondonofficial  2 дні тому +15

    Remember everyone, English is like LASAGNA (spelled 'lasagna' in the US and 'lasagne' in the UK, add that to your list of fun facts).

    • @user-jg5ie8rc1s
      @user-jg5ie8rc1s 2 дні тому +1

      Or like an onion, you might say. It has layers.

    • @MartySulls
      @MartySulls 2 дні тому +2

      You say tomato and I say tomato. You say potato and I say potato..... (I appreciate 😀 now that this works better verbally)..... sorry

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 2 дні тому +4

      I prefer Spaghetti Bognor Regis. 😊😊

    • @Martyntd5
      @Martyntd5 2 дні тому +1

      What nonsense. Lasagne isn't lasagne when it's a bag of ingredients ...it's just a bag of ingredients. It doesn't become Lasagne until those ingredients are assembled in the right order and cooked in the right way. Only then is it Lasagne. English might be made of all sorts of ingredients, but it only becomes English when those ingredients are assembled in the right way and cooked according to the recipe invented by the English. The ingredients for English dont come from England, but the recipe for the English language absolutely does.

    • @bugtracker152
      @bugtracker152 2 дні тому +1

      When you say in the UK, is it in brummie, cockney, yorkshire, scouse, glaswegian or west country? 😆 When some folks in Britain get annoyed because of an American accent, they often forget that the UK itself got a bunch of accents on a piece of the land which is almost 3 times smaller than Texas. 😉

  • @peterbrazier7107
    @peterbrazier7107 2 дні тому +21

    The English Language met with all the other languages, and mugged them, and took the words it wanted. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Ikkeligeglad
      @Ikkeligeglad День тому

      The people in England was forced to use those languages not by choise

  • @eloquentlyemma
    @eloquentlyemma 2 дні тому +11

    I love that one of the “poshest” English words “smashing” when meaning very good or even excellent, comes from the Gaelic phrase “Is math sin” (pronounced s’ ma-shin) which means “That is good”. It was brought to England from soldiers who trained in the Western Isles and the Highlands of Scotland.

    • @LastEuropaKiss
      @LastEuropaKiss День тому +1

      That's actually considered a "folk etymology", it's thought of as improbable as the actual origin though, as smashing seems to originate in America apparently.

  • @riculfriculfson7243
    @riculfriculfson7243 2 дні тому +17

    Why 'Black Plague'? It was always 'The Black Death' when I were a nipper.

    • @raystewart3648
      @raystewart3648 2 дні тому

      Due to the black puff spots that formed under the arm pits and genitals. I have always heard it as the Black Plague.

    • @BrandydocMeriabuck
      @BrandydocMeriabuck День тому +1

      It's both tbh, I've heard both since I was a kid. Just general variation

  • @Magpie_Media
    @Magpie_Media 2 дні тому +10

    English = 8 languages in a trench coat.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  2 дні тому

      what a great way of putting it!

    • @barneylaurance1865
      @barneylaurance1865 2 дні тому +1

      I think this underplays how much English is really Germanic language. Or main grammar and most commonly used short words are all still based on what we had in Old English derived from the closely related Germanic languages.

  • @DavidSmith-cx8dg
    @DavidSmith-cx8dg 2 дні тому +6

    The great vowel shift sounds like the consequences of a dodgy lasagne ( lasagna ) An interesting little talk .

  • @musik102
    @musik102 2 дні тому +13

    Well, English certainly comes from English. Over centuries it was developed from the language of the original anglo- saxons BUT was changed beyond recognition from what the first 5th century invaders from Germanic lands spoke. The grammar has changed dramatically. A huge of French/ Latin words have been added. To say that English doesn't come from England is like saying French doesn't come from France. Or Spanish from Spain. See how silly it gets.

    • @xVancha
      @xVancha 2 дні тому +1

      But we do say French doesn't come from France, or Spanish from Spain...That's why we call them romance/latin languages.

    • @musik102
      @musik102 2 дні тому

      @@xVancha Oh dear. Did they speak French in ancient Rome? No they didn't! It's like asking a Parisian if he is French, and when he says " yes" , tell he's wrong because his great,great, great great, great, great....times 500 or so came from ancient Rome. Crazy, don't you think?

    • @xVancha
      @xVancha 2 дні тому

      ​@@musik102 You're confusing where something comes from with what it is. I can become a French citizen without being from France. Ancient Rome can be where French came from without them speaking it. You came from your parents without them being you. Just because you are your own person with your own personality doesn't change that...Or would you argue you gave birth to yourself?

    • @musik102
      @musik102 2 дні тому +1

      @@xVancha Well, using that logic ( or what passes for logic) why stop at ancient Rome, and Latin. For example, answer me this : " Where did Latin come from? ". And, don't say ancient Rome!

    • @xVancha
      @xVancha День тому

      @@musik102 Latium, apparently. Proto-indo-european settlers from either the north or west, or both? My real answer would be that it's turtles all the way down. :)

  • @davidioanhedges
    @davidioanhedges 2 дні тому +5

    4 Tribes - Angles, Saxon, Jutes, and Frisians - and Old English is most closely related to Frisian ...
    Stir in Norse, Old Norman French, and add a bit of Latin, spice with Dutch as a trade language, then borrow words from many languages, and you get modern English

  • @robertwoolstencroft5946
    @robertwoolstencroft5946 2 дні тому +4

    Jutes also settled in Hampshire and the isle of Wight.😊

  • @davidhyams2769
    @davidhyams2769 2 дні тому +3

    The Gaelic (Irish, Scots, Manx). Celtic (Welsh, Cornish, Breton), Germanic (Angle, Saxon, Jute, Danish, Norwegian) and Romance (Latin, French etc) languages that contributed to early and middle English are all branches of an even older linguistic family called Proto-Indo-European. There are a few European languages that don't have this connection, Finnish, Estonian, Hungarian and Basque. Finnish and Estonian are closely related and more distantly related to Hungarian, while Basque is a completely separate language that doesn't appear to be associated with any other and is thought to be extremely ancient.

    • @bobm4378
      @bobm4378 2 дні тому

      wow, thanks for that 'deep dive' :D :D

  • @john43397
    @john43397 2 дні тому +2

    What some people call "modern English" began in the Shakespearian era. The word modern is confusing now to many people after 400 years, it has nothing to do with todays' modernity. Old English still has an influence on base words we use every day. Such as go get bring and words that describe what we do every day. Incidentally "here" in the Anglo Saxon chronicles means "army". This confuses many people who try to read the chronicles.

  • @susanford2388
    @susanford2388 2 дні тому +6

    Ombudsmann is a word used in Danish Norwegian, Swedish, German & English.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  2 дні тому +2

      didn't know that!

    • @susanford2388
      @susanford2388 2 дні тому

      @@GirlGoneLondonofficial I learned that in 1999 when I was working in Athens, I read in the Athens News, that the Gov. was finally putting an Ombudsmann together to seek out corruption, I exclaimed Hooray in the office & my Swedish/German colleague said that word is German, so we looked it up, in a dictionary of course back then. Have a nice day. I enjoy your videos.

    • @euanthomas3423
      @euanthomas3423 2 дні тому +1

      @@susanford2388 Looks Scandinavian rather than German (om rather than um, bud as in Danish forbud for forbidden etc.)

    • @user-gu2hk8sg1p
      @user-gu2hk8sg1p 2 дні тому +2

      That's because we, the English, borrowed the word from Swedish in the 1960s. We had no Ombudsman before then.

    • @Bramfly
      @Bramfly 2 дні тому +1

      Also in Dutch

  • @Really-hx7rl
    @Really-hx7rl 2 дні тому +3

    Words such as Knife come from a Norwegian heritage. We dont pronounce the K but that is how you would of pronounced it originally.
    There is also a great shift going on, on multimedia platforms such as UA-cam.
    Its called the great bowl shift and its where people talk BS most of the time.🙄

  • @Nomadicmillennial92
    @Nomadicmillennial92 2 дні тому +2

    Technically every language is part of a wider connected family of languages. Virtually every language has loan words from other languages. Turkish for instance has a surprising amount of French words.

  • @michaelgutteridge2384
    @michaelgutteridge2384 2 дні тому +2

    But the old Anglo-Saxon English is itself derived from earlier proto Indo-European language (as is Sanskrit, Hindi and Greek, etc) so this process of saying something doesn't exist because it's derived from something else can go on infinitely right back to when human beings first learned how to speak, and probably even that can be traced to the gruntings of primates and such, so it basically becomes a matter of defining where something began according to your individual preference and in that respect modern English as spoken today comes from England or rather the British Isles .

  • @user-hv5wi6nd4i
    @user-hv5wi6nd4i 2 дні тому +4

    Modern English spoken and taught around the world is because of Britain, the most influential language in the modern world, and it is still evolving! Strangely, French was the official language of England from 1066 until 1362 but for such a romanticized language🙄.......practical English still made an immanent comeback and then some. IMO "Modern English" is the "de facto" language of Britain, not just England.

    • @chrissouthgate4554
      @chrissouthgate4554 2 дні тому

      Said he, defining the position of English; in Latin!

    • @user-hv5wi6nd4i
      @user-hv5wi6nd4i 2 дні тому +1

      @@chrissouthgate4554 Of course English is heavily influenced by Latin roots (among others) that is not disputed here. 🤔"de facto" is in the Oxford English dictionary.

    • @AlecBrady
      @AlecBrady 2 дні тому

      Norman French still has official status in England: when a law passed in Parliament has received the Royal Assent (the equivalent of a US act being signed into law by the President) this is announced with the words "le Roy le veult", "the King wishes it".

    • @RoyCousins
      @RoyCousins День тому

      ​​@@chrissouthgate4554 It's the Lingua Franca! 😁

  • @XRos28
    @XRos28 2 дні тому

    Great video! I know most of it, but not all! Videos like this are amazing, educational mixed with historic informationmative and more. Good one, thanks!

  • @colinmoon8097
    @colinmoon8097 2 дні тому +2

    Why would anyone complain about calling it British English as it merely clarifies the version of English being used.

  • @martinedwards7360
    @martinedwards7360 2 дні тому

    Good explanation 👏

  • @angelawhitehouse8066
    @angelawhitehouse8066 2 дні тому +2

    I don't believe that most ordinary people ever spoke much Latin, or later on French.

  • @michaeljoyce9161
    @michaeljoyce9161 2 дні тому

    A subset of standard English has been used since 1988 for communicating between vessels at sea. It follows on from English being adopted for the language of aviation. This language subset is called Seaspeak.

  • @stephenlee5929
    @stephenlee5929 2 дні тому +2

    The thing is if you need to differentiate versions of English, then adapting the name that the language is named for seems wrong.
    Also given that most people speaking of 'British English' are not talking about that used normally in Wales, Scotland or NI, then at least it should be 'English, English.

  • @john_g_harris
    @john_g_harris День тому +3

    The reason I don't like "British English" is because English English is quite a lot different from Scottish English.

    • @donaldb1
      @donaldb1 День тому

      That's fair. But you could say British Englishes.

    • @john_g_harris
      @john_g_harris День тому

      @donaldb1 No you couldn't, not if you'd had a drink or two. 🙂

  • @MrGBH
    @MrGBH 2 дні тому +3

    English isn't a language, it's three languages in a trench coat, that goes around beating up other languages in order to rifle through their pockets for loan words and loose grammar

    • @Nomadicmillennial92
      @Nomadicmillennial92 2 дні тому

      F

    • @barneylaurance1865
      @barneylaurance1865 2 дні тому +1

      Maybe so, but those three languages in the trench coat are all West Germanic languages. French, Greek, and Latin are just some of the other languages. French and Latin are not in the coat as a lot of people seem to assume.

  • @misolgit69
    @misolgit69 2 дні тому +3

    it's a homogenous language some would say greater than the sum of it's parts

  • @lucie4185
    @lucie4185 2 дні тому +1

    You missed out Chaucer. Very important bloke not just for his naked antics in A Knights Tale. He wrote in English when it was unfashionable to do so.

  • @pinkgirlgaminghappypink697
    @pinkgirlgaminghappypink697 2 дні тому +1

    the great vowel shift change the v for a b and we know were that would leave us all 😁

  • @Stand663
    @Stand663 2 дні тому +4

    Actually the English language is filled with Indian words ie bangle, shampoo, jungle, crimson, bungalow, khaki etc etc.

    • @lawrenceglaister4364
      @lawrenceglaister4364 2 дні тому

      Ie bungalow and shuftie

    • @weedle30
      @weedle30 2 дні тому

      Gymkhana, juggernaut, jodhpurs….

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 2 дні тому

      pyjamas.

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 2 дні тому

      @@lawrenceglaister4364 Shufti is from the Arabic.

    • @Stand663
      @Stand663 2 дні тому

      We use African words too ie Coffee, Mama, Banjo, Jamboree …

  • @MillsyLM
    @MillsyLM 2 дні тому

    Map Men's "Why are British place names so hard to pronounce" is a good explanation of this subject too.

  • @DevilishScience
    @DevilishScience День тому

    There are two separate sources of French in English. The early Norman French and a later Parisian French, so we have cognates such as warranty from Norman and guarantee from Parisian. Similarly warden and guardian.

  • @donaldanderson6604
    @donaldanderson6604 22 години тому

    1066 is the key date as it produced ,over 400 years, a marriage of French and German. Generally, French and Latin gave us the long, fancy words and Anglo Saxon gave us all the best swear words. I was lucky to learn German and Anglo Saxon at the same time, back in the days when English degrees required knowledge of AS. By the way, Shakespeare is really easy if you hear it in a really good stage production. Listen to Judi Dench or Ian Mckellan and it sounds perfectly straightforward.

  • @thorbjrnhellehaven5766
    @thorbjrnhellehaven5766 День тому

    "British English" is what I would refer to as a retronym.
    Before the language spread out there were just "English", but after other variants came to exist. It can be useful to keep the original term as an umbrella, but add extra description to distinguish them.
    Just like there were "acoustic guitars" were just "guitars" before the invention of "electric guitars", and all of them are "guitars"

  • @TheEulerID
    @TheEulerID 2 дні тому +1

    Lasagna is certainly not English, whether we are talking cuisine, linguistics or culture...

  • @hughtube5154
    @hughtube5154 2 дні тому

    Perversely, though English is the global language*, the term used to describe when non natives use English to converse is "lingua franca" - an Italian phrase which translates to "language of the Franks" (the Franks being Germans who moved to France).
    *for business. Medicine uses Latin for anatomy, and Greek for diseases.

  • @catherinewilkins2760
    @catherinewilkins2760 2 дні тому +2

    English is a modern language, most of the profanities are Anglo-Saxon. Its Germanic and medieval Norman French. Latin also included. We speak a bastard language.

    • @exaqtian
      @exaqtian 2 дні тому +1

      This is just language in general you have been listening to too many frenchmen. Im sure a person who spoke Latin would think the same about french. Its not a bastard language its a melting pot language There is way more to it than this video i recomend RobWords channel.

  • @carolineskipper6976
    @carolineskipper6976 День тому

    I've always been fascinated by language and its development, and the connections between different languages. Maybe if I'd known you could study linguistics when I left school I might have done just that.

  • @russelsellick316
    @russelsellick316 2 дні тому

    Also used to make up new words from ancient greek.
    Latin was known there before 1066...

  • @danmayberry1185
    @danmayberry1185 День тому

    Grandad reverted to Cornish when he got excited.

  • @rogerwitte
    @rogerwitte День тому

    I love Simon Roper's videos about old and middle English

  • @neilmccarthy5102
    @neilmccarthy5102 2 дні тому

    Very good analogy! ‘Lasagna’ .. love it!

  • @JohnSmith-oe4ci
    @JohnSmith-oe4ci День тому

    I find it interesting that English uses the word bottle which is only used in Friesian. The rest of the northern Germanic region uses the word flasche - which we also have in English as flask

    • @LastEuropaKiss
      @LastEuropaKiss День тому +1

      Well, Brea bûter en griene tsiis makket goed Ingelsk en goed Frysk after all.

  • @bonetiredtoo
    @bonetiredtoo 2 дні тому +1

    This has been much debated and the jury is still out whether he intended it but every word, except one, in Churchill's "We shall fight on the beaches" portion of his great speech of 4th June 1940 has Old English roots. The exception? The last word "surrender" which is of French origin.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  2 дні тому +1

      oh that's really interesting!

    • @atypicalatoms9425
      @atypicalatoms9425 2 дні тому

      😂😂 that is basically how we view the French lol

    • @chrissouthgate4554
      @chrissouthgate4554 2 дні тому +1

      @@atypicalatoms9425 Funny, but not with a lot of justice. After all the French won the Hundred Years War, the American Revolution & most of the Napoleonic Wars.

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 2 дні тому

      @@GirlGoneLondonofficial No. Surrender isn't a French word. That's just taking the P out of the French because they were supposed to surrender a lot. You used to be able to do a Google search on 'French military victories' and the top result was '404 not found. Did you mean French military defeats?' That search term no longer works.

    • @barneylaurance1865
      @barneylaurance1865 2 дні тому

      @@Poliss95 What do you mean its not a French word? It apparently comes from Old French "surrendre".

  • @ultraredd
    @ultraredd 2 дні тому +3

    Fun fact: The US doesn't have an legally official language. English is commonly used but so is Spanish.

    • @RobinPalmerTV
      @RobinPalmerTV 2 дні тому

      It was once thought the de facto language of the US would be Spanish by 2020 as it would have overtaken English but the thinking is that the Trump years put stop to this happening.

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 2 дні тому

      @@RobinPalmerTV What - by stopping immigration?? LOL.

    • @Stand663
      @Stand663 2 дні тому +1

      The official language in the US is English.
      When immigrants come to the US, they have to speak in English.

    • @ultraredd
      @ultraredd 2 дні тому

      @@Stand663 With all due respect, please refer to usa.gov, an official government website:
      "Does the U.S. have an official language?
      The United States does not have an official language. English is the most widely used language in the U.S., and some states designate it as their official language. People in the U.S. communicate in more than 350 languages. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, some of the most widely spoken languages other than English are Spanish, Chinese, Tagalog, Vietnamese, and Arabic."
      English is the default most commonly spoken language, especially when it comes to government, which is why immigrants are encouraged to learn to speak it.

    • @cookielady7662
      @cookielady7662 2 дні тому +1

      @@Stand663 the original poster is correct. We do not have an official language.

  • @TukikoTroy
    @TukikoTroy 2 дні тому

    Love the Lasagne analogy. There was a documentary on one of the UK channels years ago which compared Old English with the language spoke in Jutland and both languages could understand one another. When we were eleven, our English teacher had us read Macbeth out loud in class with each student reading a passage. Then the teacher 'read' it again in modern English to demonstrate how the language had developed since Shakespeare's time. Great fun... had the side-effect of fostering an interest in Shakespeare in some of us, too.

    • @LastEuropaKiss
      @LastEuropaKiss День тому

      If it's the one I'm thinking of that was Frisia in the Netherlands not Jutland, and it was Eddie Izzard trying to buy a brown cow from a Frisian farmer, but otherwise yes, had the Normans not invaded English and Frisian would likely be highly intelligible today (though kind of still are to some small degree). If you look at the sources from Norse sagas and Anglo-Saxon writings there is never mention of a translator being needed between the Germanics, but always a mention of a translator with say Norse speaking to the French for example. The Norse even wrote about the English in one of the sagas something along the lines of *We share the same tongue, and were once the same people*.

    • @TukikoTroy
      @TukikoTroy День тому

      @@LastEuropaKiss Ah yes, that sounds about right. Eddie being in it rang a bell.

  • @fr3238
    @fr3238 День тому +1

    List of English words of Old Norse origin:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_words_of_Old_Norse_origin

  • @afpwebworks
    @afpwebworks 2 дні тому

    That's fascinating. You are very good at digging about in these rabbit holes and finding things i never knew anything about. I knew otday's subject up to the extent of knowing that English was made up from lots of influences But that's roughly where it ended for me. Thank you for this video and so many others.. Keep on going Who knows what else you'll find that i never bothered finding out about and you make it fascinating.

  • @charlestaylor9424
    @charlestaylor9424 2 дні тому +4

    Other languages have loan words, English follows other languages, drags them into an alley, knocks them out and rifles through their pockets for useful words.

  • @tonys1636
    @tonys1636 2 дні тому

    If one spoke Norman French to a French person today, they would recognise it was French but not understand much. A bit like a Geordie speaking to an RP speaker, both speaking a version of English. Barrister, Court and Council/Counsel have Norman French origins. Many legal words and terms do, along with Latin. The French have even started to use some of our modified Norman words as a modern French word does not exist and a long description required otherwise.
    P.s. Belvoir Castle, pronounced Beaver, is good view castle in Norman.

  • @stevealharris6669
    @stevealharris6669 День тому +1

    Hello from the Kingdom of East Anglia.

  • @Pcologist
    @Pcologist День тому

    As a keen student of Onomastics over the last 70 odd years the history of the English language is more complex in its etymology. However, as an ardent follower of your adventures through your vlogs. I must compliment you on your simplified explanation of the origination of modern English as is today.
    Please remember that Englisc was used from the very earliest of times and many years before and without any distinction of all the later ancient Teutons or their languages imported by Germanic invaders.
    Englisc was as a language applied to the tribal group of related languages by Alfred the Great and thus the name English for the Language is much older than England the Country.

  • @filipieja6997
    @filipieja6997 2 дні тому

    You forgot Vatter(father), mutter(mother), tochter(daughter), sohn(son), nephe(nephew) etc ... are all Germanic - the language of the common people and family.
    Latin through the influence of William only had a heavy influence on vocabularies used in law, commerce, in leadership etc.., the vast majority of the common people during the time of Willan's reign remained the Old English among the people. The structure of English language itself remained intacked and still having a strong sentence structure to Germanic languages including the Northern Germanic language from Norway, Sweden and Denmark.
    The closest to Old English today is Low German and Frisian still spoken in North Sea areas today (in north Germany and Frisian Dutch regions).

  • @stevenwinteruk
    @stevenwinteruk 2 дні тому

    This is looked up many years ago. English evolved from those european languages and has had lots of influences from other languages as well, such as French.

  • @riculfriculfson7243
    @riculfriculfson7243 2 дні тому

    I love the fact that we have a linguistic rule that states "'I' before 'E' except after 'C'". We have more words that BREAK that rule than follow it. Our language makes NO SENSE 🤣

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 2 дні тому +1

      @riculfriculfson7243 That's why the 'rule' is no longer taught in schools.

  • @daphneschuring5810
    @daphneschuring5810 2 дні тому +1

    Old English and Frisian are quite close.

  • @rollinwithunclepete824
    @rollinwithunclepete824 День тому

    The US, nationally, does not have an official language. However some states do.

  • @Hfil66
    @Hfil66 День тому

    The problems with English spelling are not so much about the hybridization of the language (most European languages are fairly hybrid) but because how old the spelling rules are (this is also true of French). Many other European languages only developed standardised spelling in the 19th century (modern countries such as Italy, Germany, Poland, Hungary, and many others, did not exist during the 16th and 17th century, and so did not develop spelling rules until the 19th century - so their spelling rules are better aligned with modern pronunciation of the languages).

  • @paulhammond5599
    @paulhammond5599 2 дні тому +1

    Very interesting but every language in Europe and most others worldwide are formed in exactly the same way.

  • @kachuru
    @kachuru 2 дні тому

    I've been learning a bit of Dutch and sometimes it sounds just like English with a strong accent. Like, je drinkt water en je eet een appel

  • @LastEuropaKiss
    @LastEuropaKiss День тому

    A lot of the problem with Beowulf is the spelling and extra letters. If you know some other Germanic languages it helps too. Though even Modern English written phonetically with the spelling conventions and extra letters they used in Old English would look indecipherable to most people today lol, for example, this is Modern English:
    In a þic and lusc ƿīlæġe, þær lifde a geong man namde Eadric. Hē ƿæs a sċēap-hyrde hƿo tendad to his flocc ƿiþ muc cēaru. Ān dæg, hƿīle cēaring for his sċēap on þe grene hyll, hē sāwe a ƿundorful glād in þe heorte of þe forst. Eadric, bēing of an ēgre kind, desided to ƿencur forþ into þe ƿudu. Þe trēas stōd tall and þe lēafes hƿispered suce of old. As hē georniged dēopre, þe āer greoƿ þicce ƿiþ an ōþer-ƿoruldlig ārā.

  • @53Zander
    @53Zander 2 дні тому +1

    If you could look back on this video in say 200 years, would we understand the language , we are using now if we did not have a translator????😂😂

    • @Poliss95
      @Poliss95 2 дні тому +1

      @53Zander I don't understand a lot of the language young people are using now! When did 'sick' start to mean good?

    • @barneylaurance1865
      @barneylaurance1865 2 дні тому

      Probably, yes. We can understand writing from 1824, 200 years ago, e.g. The Westminster Review, fairly easily now. Although linguistic innovations can spread much quicker now I think there may also be more pressure to slow down change, as we can easily read informal internet writing from years ago. In the 1800s I imagine people would have been exposed to little or no old informal language usage.

    • @barneylaurance1865
      @barneylaurance1865 2 дні тому

      @@Poliss95 If you don't understand that's possibly because they're not trying to include you at that moment. That doesn't mean they don't also know a more formal register of language that's doesn't change nearly as fast. Urban Dictionary has a definition of 'sick' meaning good or cool from as early as 2001 (maybe earlier but the definitions are crowd-sourced and it doesn't allow sorting by date)

  • @davidswan4083
    @davidswan4083 2 дні тому

    Best thing Old English ever did was lose grammatical gender, it just doesn't make sense that an inanimate object could be masculine or feminine, or you could have oddities like Lady or Wife being feminine but woman being masculine (Taking the gender of the suffixe) or Boy and Girl being neuter. I'm using the Modern English translations here.

  • @jamesbeeching6138
    @jamesbeeching6138 2 дні тому +1

    English is a bastardised language which has (and is still) evolving from several sources or root languages such as Germanic/Frisian/French/Norse/Celtic.....We are now evolving again with influences from our Empire ..IE pyjamas, bungalow, karzi etc....Interesting that food/animal names show the class distinction in medieval times: Beef-cow, pork-Pig , mutton-sheep.....Another of my favourite words is badger...Evolved from the French for digging...The old English name was Brock!!🦡🦡🦡🦡🦡

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 2 дні тому +1

      That last food one is strange, as the animal is used for the more expensive food (UK) option being Lamb, Lamb is both the animal and the meat.

    • @jamesbeeching6138
      @jamesbeeching6138 2 дні тому

      @@stephenlee5929 I think in the medieval times mutton was eaten more than lamb!

  • @robert3987
    @robert3987 2 дні тому

    The Normans brought many French words to England.

  • @clivehemming4778
    @clivehemming4778 2 дні тому

    " Pipe down you lot, your having a bubble." What about the twelfth century English speaking collage of Oxford.

  • @andrewconstable9409
    @andrewconstable9409 2 дні тому

    Many linguists are of the opinion that English had a pre Roman Swedish input. Ancient Greek sailors described the language of (western) Britain as anglopvonic. Draw your own conclusions..

  • @philash824
    @philash824 2 дні тому

    A lot of French words entered the English language after 1066 for some reason. Edit: never mind you just mentioned it

  • @Mike-James
    @Mike-James 2 дні тому

    According to the people that knows (Google) and not the Karen, more than 350 languages are spoken in the USA. In Great Britain over 600.

  • @georgedyson9754
    @georgedyson9754 День тому

    Of course the European languages you mention are also not unrelated in their origins. The Indo-European languages also have some common roots in Sanskrit. Languages are not static and immutable and constantly change over the years, diverging by location and separation from other tribes geographically, but then as you say may, merge again through territorial conquest reuniting some of those languages which have earlier common roots.
    Even in my 70+ years of life I have seen English mutate in several ways - one of those which constantly irritates me is the merging of adjectives and adverbs. Adverbs are on the way out it seems! Especially a statement like 'win big' which always leaves me hanging with the question - big what, as big requires a noun in my use of English! It could be a big difference in score ' or a big trophy perhaps. But then I am being pedantic I suppose!

  • @melissareohorn7436
    @melissareohorn7436 2 дні тому

    East Anglia is actually West of Anglia

  • @morganetches3749
    @morganetches3749 День тому

    Yes it is, it developed in England

  • @neilchilds7555
    @neilchilds7555 2 дні тому

    We know that it’s a mixture of germanic we had a visit from the Viking romans a bit of French and so on today we have English we british people know where we came from and our language it’s a mixture the smugness of telling people where thier language comes from 😅and all word that were mentioned are use by the u.s people I’ve all so forget the u.s then changes some spellings of words one example Color when it’s colour laziness

  • @Poliss95
    @Poliss95 2 дні тому

    Most European languages are Indo-European. Finland has to be different and uses the Uralic language.

  • @grahamroberts2893
    @grahamroberts2893 День тому

    English is one of the three official languages of the European Union 😅

  • @rolos140670
    @rolos140670 2 дні тому

    English is the most romance of the germanic languages. French is the most germanic of the romace languages

  • @chuckmaddison2924
    @chuckmaddison2924 День тому

    No

  • @infinityandbeyond2680
    @infinityandbeyond2680 2 дні тому +1

    But that doesn't mean that America can claim it since they have no official language

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  2 дні тому +1

      I think only a very dumb segment of Americans would try to claim that English is originally from America. :)

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 2 дні тому

      "The US Senate passed an amendment to the Immigration Law making English the official language of the United States in the summer of 2006."
      "Sen. Cramer Co-leads Bill to Designate English as Official Language of the United States. WASHINGTON - U.S. Senators Kevin Cramer (R-ND) and JD Vance (R-OH) introduced the English Language Unity Act to establish English as the official language of the United States." - Senator Cramer's own website, 2023.

    • @darrens7995
      @darrens7995 2 дні тому +1

      ​@@GirlGoneLondonofficialare you sure you didn't mean do instead of would? Every American I have come across says British English and always English when referring to what comes out of them. How is that not the same thing as dumb? If we are supposed to assume we know what they mean why wouldn't it make sense to say it the correct way? Why argue with the English everytime they are wrong?

    • @mirfjc
      @mirfjc 2 дні тому

      @@wessexdruid7598 There are pushes to do this, and language does get slipped into laws in formulation, but none have thus far been signed into law. Sen. Cramer is still pushing for formal official designation in 2024, showing that it is not yet the law of the land. (passing the US Senate is just like a bill passing the House of Lords - a law is not a law once voted, it's a law once reconciled by upper and lower houses and then signed into law by the head-of-state.)

    • @mirfjc
      @mirfjc 2 дні тому +1

      "But that doesn't mean that America can claim it since they have no official language" UK also does not have official language. (Google it).

  • @paulhammond5599
    @paulhammond5599 2 дні тому

    Very interesting but every language in Europe and throughout the world was formed in exactly the same way

  • @ethelmini
    @ethelmini 2 дні тому

    Modern English does still have some gendered words - brewster for example

  • @FalcomScott312
    @FalcomScott312 2 дні тому

    The only English languages you would hear people speak are Britian, North America, Australia, Canada, Wales, Ireland, & Scotland in the world!

    • @susanford2388
      @susanford2388 2 дні тому

      A Chinese Singaporean friend of mine who grew up in Singapore said in her house they spoke dialect & outside everything was English & her schooling too.

  • @oopsdidItypethatoutloud
    @oopsdidItypethatoutloud 2 дні тому

    Booo... leave our language alone 😢
    ❤ from Northeast England ❤️

  • @Mittac001
    @Mittac001 2 дні тому +8

    The English have never had a true identity, unlike the Scots, Welsh or Irish. We've been partly conquered (or taken over,) the Vikings, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Normans, Romans, etc...
    A lot of place names also reflect on who was ruling that part of England at the time. For example, -by is from the Vikings, and -cester is from the Romans.

    • @davidioanhedges
      @davidioanhedges 2 дні тому

      Scots are the descendents of the Scotti an Irish Tribe, which explains why they speak a sister language to Irish Gaelic, not a descendant of Pictish
      They were conquered by the Norse/Vikings, the Normans, and the English many times ...
      The Irish were partly conquered by the Norse as well and they founded most of the Irish cities
      The Welsh are the most pure ... but not very

    • @MrGBH
      @MrGBH 2 дні тому +5

      if the English have an identity, it's as the centre of a multicultural mashup

    • @chrissouthgate4554
      @chrissouthgate4554 2 дні тому +1

      @@MrGBH I was thinking the other day, that many British are more Irish than the self-proclaimed Irish-Americans.

    • @Really-hx7rl
      @Really-hx7rl 2 дні тому +1

      Actually Scott's are not the true tribes that made up Scotland over a thousand years ago. The Scott's today moved in from Northern England. 🙄😁🤣

    • @mirfjc
      @mirfjc 2 дні тому

      Scotland has actually an even more mashed origin than England. England is "just" Romanized Britons mixed with invasive Anglo Saxons; then blended with Vikings and French-speaking Vikings (Normans). Scotland comes originally from a 4-way mash-up of an Irish invasion in the western highlands and islands (the eponymous Scotti), non-Romanized Britons (Picts), Romanized Britons (the ancient Kingdom of Strathclyde), and the northern end of Anglo Saxon Northumbria, which reached up to Edinburgh (hence the name) and got isolated from the rest of Northumbria due to the Danelaw Vikings. The Anglo-Saxons are the reason there is (the poorly named) "Scots" "language" that is native to modern Scotland despite being and Anglic language (would be considered an extreme dialect except for political reasons - it is NOT English "imposed" on Scotland, it is a native Scottish language). On top of those 4 pieces in place by about 700 AD, you then have to add on a significant Viking component. This includes by far the most Viking originated place in the UK: The Shetland Islands.

  • @thearab59
    @thearab59 День тому

    Your list of German words are just that, Modern German words that are used as loan words in English, just like pizza is from Modern Italian. They are not words brought over from southern Denmark in the 6th century, as these things did not even exist in the 6th century.
    BTW, congrats on voting today. Now you, like me, are to blame for it all!

  • @zandvoort8616
    @zandvoort8616 2 дні тому +2

    English originates from Germany.

    • @England....
      @England.... 2 дні тому +1

      Jawohl mann! Anglo Saxon ja!

  • @alangknowles
    @alangknowles 2 дні тому +3

    The UK doesn't have English as an Official Language. Only Welsh is recognised as such.

    • @user-gu2hk8sg1p
      @user-gu2hk8sg1p 2 дні тому +2

      That's not true.

    • @mirfjc
      @mirfjc 2 дні тому

      @@user-gu2hk8sg1p It is true. Google it.

  • @user-jg5ie8rc1s
    @user-jg5ie8rc1s 2 дні тому +1

    Nope, it didn't. It originated in what is now Germany, brought over by the Angles and the Saxons. Over time it developed into anglo-saxon, then further evolved into later versions of English.

    • @dib000
      @dib000 2 дні тому +1

      That's exactly what she said.

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 2 дні тому

      And no input from the Jutes?

    • @user-jg5ie8rc1s
      @user-jg5ie8rc1s 2 дні тому +1

      @@dib000 I just answered the question in the title because I am lazy.

    • @user-jg5ie8rc1s
      @user-jg5ie8rc1s 2 дні тому

      @@stephenlee5929 I know the Jutes were involved, also, but I don't know the full ins and outs of what happened, just the basics.

  • @Pcologist
    @Pcologist День тому

    As a keen student of Onomastics over the last 70 odd years the history of the English language is more complex in its etymology. However, as an ardent follower of your adventures through your vlogs. I must compliment you on your simplified explanation of the origination of modern English as is today.
    Please remember that Englisc was used from the very earliest of times and many years before and without any distinction of all the later ancient Teutons or their languages imported by Germanic invaders.
    Englisc was as a language applied to the tribal group of related languages by Alfred the Great and thus the name English for the Language is much older than England the Country.