Professional Documents
Culture Documents
We all know that English is probably one of the hardest language to learn
since it has over 800,000 words. What you might not know about the English
language is where it actually came from and how it came to being the most
popular language used in the world today. A recently published article from the
Online Graduate Programs Blog describes just that plus many other interesting
facts about the English language that you may or may not know about.
English came from Germanic roots: When tribes from what is now Germany
came to the land that would be England, they brought with them the language
that would eventually grow into the dialect we use today.
There are three basic eras to English formation: Old English, which ran
from the 5th through 11th centuries; Middle English, which lasted until the
15th century; and Modern English, which takes us to the present.
English disappeared from written language for a while: The Norman conquest
of England in 1066 established Norman French as the upper-class language and
relegated English to peasants. Churches keep records in French, and novelists
write in that language. Basically, English stops being a written language for
more than 100 years.
English literature didn't reappear until after 1200: Changing political
climates led to the Provisions of Oxford, a constitution-like document written
in English in 1258. By 1300, English as a language had taken hold again.
There are more than 125 English dialects worldwide: Each dialect uses English
in its own way, from pronunciation to construction.
More English speakers reside in the U.S. than anywhere else: More than 250
million Americans speak English (and it's the first language for 215 million of
them), placing it easily at the top of the list. Second place? India, with 125
million.
Dozens of nations have English as their official (or co-official) language:
These include the U.K., Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa, and Australia.
The first purely English dictionary appeared in 1604: It was called A Table
Alphabeticall [sic], and it was written by a schoolteacher named Robert
Cawdrey. It was far from a complete guide to the language, and it would take a
century and a half for the next step to be made.
If you're in the United states obviously American would be better for you.
If you're in the UK obviously Oxford is better for you.
If you're Indian and learnt Oxford English growing up you will surely prefer
Oxford.If you were trying to become a rock star or an actor perhaps American
isbetter.
Also in a narrow context perhaps on this forum -
Learning English as a beginner and you are quite sure you will never live or
work in the US or work for a US company in your own country or watch
endless US soaps etc - I would guess you could have a good fundamental case
for arguing Oxford is better simply because it is the mother tongue and may be
easier to "revert back to".
But from a purely linguistic point of view without any geographical or "other"
preferences etc I would opt for Oxford English.
An expert is one who knows more and more about less and less until he
knows absolutely everything about nothing.
At the formal level, the differences are not very significant at all, because
native speakers can sometimes read 50 pages into a book before detecting that
it's not from their own country. When we're reading quickly, we don't always
notice the spelling differences.
The spelling differences between American and British English aren't
increasing that much, and they're not as great as most foreigners think they are.
Foreigners often exaggerate the differences. If you look at what foreigners think
is correct English spelling, and then you check the UK editions of Oxford
dictionaries, you find the foreigners' spelling is often too "British". Besides
spelling, some of the vocabulary and idioms are different. These especially
include the terms for inventions that developed when communication across
the Atlantic was still difficult, such as the names of various basic car parts
(while the names of the newly invented parts are the same in the US and UK).
And of course, the local slang is different. Many foreigners think the British
speak "correct" English and the Americans speak "slang", but the British
sometimes use so much slang that it's hard for anyone but the British to
understand them, or maybe even for anyone from outside their own town.