时间:2018-12-16 作者:英语课 分类:2013年VOA慢速英语(一)月


英语课

 


 


EXPLORATIONS - How English Evolved Into a Modern Language


This is Steve Ember. And this is Shirley Griffith with the VOA Special English program, EXPLORATIONS. Today we present the second of our two programs about the history of the English Language.


Last week, we told how the English language developed as a result of several invasions of Britain. The first involved three tribes 1 called the Angles, the Jutes and the Saxons. A mix of their languages produced a language called Anglo-Saxon, or Old English. It sounded very much like German. Only a few words remained from the Celts who had lived in Britain.


Two more invasions added words to Old English. The Vikings of Denmark, Norway and Sweden arrived in Britain more than one thousand years ago. The next invasion took place in the year ten sixty-six. French forces from Normandy were led by a man known as William the Conqueror 2.


The Norman rulers added many words to English. The words “parliament,” “jury,” “justice,” and others that deal with law come from the Norman rulers.


Over time, the different languages combined to result in what English experts call Middle English. While Middle English still sounds similar to German, it also begins to sound like Modern English.


Here Warren Scheer reads the very beginning of Geoffrey Chaucer’s great poem, “The Canterbury Tales” as it was written in Middle English.


Chaucer wrote that poem in the late thirteen hundreds. It was written in the language of the people. The rulers of Britain at that time still spoke 3 the Norman French they brought with them in ten sixty-six.


The kings of Britain did not speak the language of the people until the early fourteen hundreds. Slowly, Norman French was used less and less until it disappeared.


The English language was strongly influenced by an event that took place more than one thousand four hundred years ago. In the year five ninety-seven, the Roman Catholic 4 Church began its attempt to make Christianity the religion of Britain.


The language of the Catholic Church was Latin. Latin was not spoken as a language in any country at that time. But it was still used by some people.


Latin made it possible for a church member from Rome to speak to a church member from Britain. Educated people from different countries could communicate using Latin.


Latin had a great affect on the English language. Here are a few examples. The Latin word “discus” became several words in English including “disk,” “dish,” and “desk.” The Latin word “quietus” became the English word “quiet.” Some English names of plants such as ginger 5 and trees such as cedar 6 come from Latin. So do some medical words such as cancer.


English is a little like a living thing that continues to grow. English began to grow more quickly when William Caxton returned to Britain in the year fourteen seventy-six. He had been in Holland and other areas of Europe where he had learned printing. He returned to Britain with the first printing press.


The printing press made it possible for almost anyone to buy a book. It helped spread education and the English language.


Slowly, during the fifteen hundreds English became the modern language we would recognize. English speakers today would be able to communicate with English speakers in the last part of the Sixteenth Century.


It was during this time period that the greatest writer in English produced his work. His name was William Shakespeare. His plays continue to be printed, acted in theaters, and seen in motion pictures almost four hundred years after his death.


Experts say that Shakespeare’s work was written to be performed on the stage, not to be read. Yet every sound of his words can produce word pictures, and provide feelings of anger, fear, and laughter. Shakespeare’s famous play “Romeo and Juliet” is so sad that people cry when they see this famous story.


The story of the power hungry King Richard the Third is another very popular play by Shakespeare. Listen as Shep O’Neal reads the beginning, of “Richard the Third.”


The development of the English language took a giant step just nine years before the death of William Shakespeare. Three small British ships crossed the Atlantic Ocean in sixteen-oh-seven. They landed in an area that would later become the southern American state of Virginia. They began the first of several British colonies. The name of the first small colony was Jamestown.


In time, people in these new colonies began to call areas of their new land by words borrowed from the native people they found living there. For example, many of the great rivers in the United States are taken from American Indian words. The Mississippi, the Tennessee, the Missouri are examples.


Other Native American words included “moccasin”, the kind of shoe made of animal skin that Indians wore on their feet. This borrowing or adding of foreign words to English was a way of expanding the language. The names of three days of the week are good examples of this. The people from Northern Europe honored three gods with a special day each week. The gods were Odin, Thor and Freya. Odin’s-day became Wednesday in English, Thor’s-day became Thursday and Freya’s-day became Friday.


Britain had other colonies in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and India. The English language also became part of these colonies. These colonies are now independent, but English still is one of the languages spoken. And the English language grew as words from the native languages were added.


For example, the word “shampoo” for soap for the hair came from India. “Banana” is believed to be from Africa.


Experts cannot explain many English words. For hundreds of years, a dog was called a “hound.” The word is still used but not as commonly as the word “dog.” Experts do not know where the word “dog” came from or when. English speakers just started using it. Other words whose origins are unknown include “fun,” “bad,” and “big.”


English speakers also continue to invent new words by linking old words together. A good example is the words “motor” and “hotel.” Many years ago someone linked them together into the word “motel 7.” A motel is a small hotel near a road where people travelling in cars can stay for the night.


Other words come from the first letters of names of groups or devices. A device to find objects that cannot be seen called Radio Detecting and Ranging became “Radar.” The North Atlantic Treaty Organization is usually called NATO.


Experts say that English has more words that explain the same thing that any other language. For example, the words “large,” “huge,” “vast,” “massive,” and “enormous” all mean something really “big.”


People often ask how many words there are in the English language. Well, no one really knows. The Oxford 8 English Dictionary lists about six hundred fifteen thousand words. Yet the many scientific words not in the dictionary could increase the number to almost one million.


And experts are never really sure how to count English words. For example, the word “mouse.” A mouse is a small creature from the rodent 9 family. But “mouse” has another very different meaning. A “mouse” is also a hand-held device used to help control a computer. If you are counting words do you count “mouse” two times?


Visitors to the Voice of America hear people speaking more than forty different languages. Most broadcasters at VOA come from countries where these languages are spoken. International organizations such as VOA would find it impossible to operate without a second language all the people speak.


The language that permits VOA to work is English. It is not unusual to see someone from the Mandarin 10 Service talking to someone from the Urdu Service, both speaking English. English is becoming the common language of millions of people worldwide, helping 11 speakers of many different languages communicate.


 



1 tribes
n.部落( tribe的名词复数 );(动、植物的)族;(一)帮;大群
  • tribes living in remote areas of the Amazonian rainforest 居住在亚马孙河雨林偏远地区的部落
  • In Africa the snake is still sacred with many tribes. 非洲许多部落仍认为蛇是不可冒犯的。 来自《简明英汉词典》
2 conqueror
n.征服者,胜利者
  • We shall never yield to a conqueror.我们永远不会向征服者低头。
  • They abandoned the city to the conqueror.他们把那个城市丢弃给征服者。
3 spoke
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说
  • They sourced the spoke nuts from our company.他们的轮辐螺帽是从我们公司获得的。
  • The spokes of a wheel are the bars that connect the outer ring to the centre.辐条是轮子上连接外圈与中心的条棒。
4 catholic
adj.天主教的;n.天主教徒
  • The Pope is the supreme leader of the Roman Catholic Church.教皇是罗马天主教的最高领袖。
  • She was a devoutly Catholic.她是一个虔诚地天主教徒。
5 ginger
n.姜,精力,淡赤黄色;adj.淡赤黄色的;vt.使活泼,使有生气
  • There is no ginger in the young man.这个年轻人没有精神。
  • Ginger shall be hot in the mouth.生姜吃到嘴里总是辣的。
6 cedar
n.雪松,香柏(木)
  • The cedar was about five feet high and very shapely.那棵雪松约有五尺高,风姿优美。
  • She struck the snow from the branches of an old cedar with gray lichen.她把长有灰色地衣的老雪松树枝上的雪打了下来。
7 motel
n.汽车游客旅馆
  • Late that night he landed at a motel.那晚他到了一家汽车旅馆。
  • The motel manager showed the guests to their room.汽车旅馆经理把旅客领到他们房间。
8 Oxford
n.牛津(英国城市)
  • At present he has become a Professor of Chemistry at Oxford.他现在已是牛津大学的化学教授了。
  • This is where the road to Oxford joins the road to London.这是去牛津的路与去伦敦的路的汇合处。
9 rodent
n.啮齿动物;adj.啮齿目的
  • When there is a full moon,this nocturnal rodent is careful to stay in its burrow.月圆之夜,这种夜间活动的啮齿类动物会小心地呆在地洞里不出来。
  • This small rodent can scoop out a long,narrow tunnel in a very short time.这种小啮齿动物能在很短的时间里挖出一条又长又窄的地道来。
10 Mandarin
n.中国官话,国语,满清官吏;adj.华丽辞藻的
  • Just over one billion people speak Mandarin as their native tongue.大约有十亿以上的人口以华语为母语。
  • Mandarin will be the new official language of the European Union.普通话会变成欧盟新的官方语言。
11 helping
n.食物的一份&adj.帮助人的,辅助的
  • The poor children regularly pony up for a second helping of my hamburger. 那些可怜的孩子们总是要求我把我的汉堡包再给他们一份。
  • By doing this, they may at times be helping to restore competition. 这样一来, 他在某些时候,有助于竞争的加强。
标签: Modern Language
学英语单词
8-foot
abort branch
adult-sized
amend the terms of LC
american blights
ansu-
Antonivtsi
axial modification
ball tree
basic lead silicate white
beer-halls
bilabe
blade angle of attack
borrow without security
brewster law
buccal occlusion
CHPL
cloth paper
coccygeal plexus
COLD-K
come into bloom
command-set vector
community-based
composite price
contact bridging
contribution by participants
dicketry
differential galactic rotation
dimensional method
electron tunneling
electroslag melting
esophagosalivary symptom
Floyd production language
fore-arms
gaatw
genus Echinochloa
gudgeon pin hole cap
gynas
hayslip
head park
i.iii.
inheritable tenancy
internationally-renowned
isometric plan
Jesuits' bark
keep your nose to the grindstone
Kiernan
klimts
lacked
lag of valve
liberalish
Lilium longiflorum
liquid waste discharge pump
live studio
load limiting device
methyl chlorofluoride
microprogrammed compiler
minimum running current
mishaving
multiphase flow
munlyn
nematocarcinus undulatips
netherregions
Nonfill
nuclear weapon test
ocular Onchocerciasis
offering to liberty
orbit perturbation
orienting compass
period of return
peucednin
phratry
pyelotubular
Qadhafist
quadruple bolt cutter
regional information
reichsbrucke
rescissorian
rigorously
route recorder
ruffneck
sharp bilge
smog front
smulovitz
soft-pitch
soft-shell clams
solitary carpel
sow the sand
specific combining ability
strained tomatoes
strikings-out
Suihua
sulphoxides
the economy
The rough and tumble
third-party transaction
Tractites
transplace
troopers
turkey stews
waur
weapon-training