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UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE CHIAPAS

Centro de Educación Continua y a Distancia


Licenciatura en inglés modalidad a Distancia

UNIDAD ACADEMICA
DESARROLLO DE LA LENGUA INGLESA
CELTS TO ANGLO SAXONS
CONCEPT MAP
U1. T4. Act. 3
Semestre: Segundo
Aurora Liliana Salas Villafuerte
aurora.salas46@unach.mx

Marzo 15, 2023


CELTS TO ANGLO-SAXONS

Germanic Settlements

Celtics Roman occupation


449 A.D. -600 A.D.
9000-2500 B.C.
4000-2000 B.C. 43 B.C. -410 A.D.

Barbarian groups attacked from


Ancestors of British people Scotland (north) Ireland (west)
came from Iberian Peninsula Germany (southeast)
Neolitic British people Roman occupation
began to live in (Julius Cesar conquered
Spain and Britain
communities
Germanic tribes were the Jules, the Angles
and the Saxons.

Stonehenge was Latín language were not King Arthur fought Saxons and kept
erected very well imposed
them away 20 years.

When Arthur died, Saxon invaded


Britain

St Agustine of Canterbury wen to


England to convert Anglo-Saxons to
Christianity
v

BORROWED WORDS THT SURVIVE IN MODERN


ENGLISH

Celtic regional dialect Latin loans

Crag, cumb (Deep valley) Pise (pea), plante (plant) win


Binn (bin), car (rock), dun (grey, dun)
brock (badger), torr (peak), bannoc (wine), cyse (cheese), catte
(piece), rice (rule), gafeluc (small spear). (cat), cetle (kettle), disc (dish),
belt (belt), cemes (shirt),
Latin brought by Irish missionaires suttere (shoemaker)

Assen (ass), ancor (hermit),


staer (history)

Celtic-based names

Rivers:Thames, Avon, Don, Exe, Usk,


Whye.
Towns : Dover (water) Eccles
(church)London (a tribal name.
NOTE: It was impossible to use a single page because of the space. I appreciate your understanding about it.

Ávila Losada, Ma. Luisa, Calhoun, Virginia S.B., and Pérez Román, Iván (2010) Celts to Anglo-Saxons [Fragment]. The long and winding road: A life story of the English Language (pp. 16-20).
Chiapas: Universidad Autónoma de Chiapas.

Crystal, David (1995).The Early Period [Fragment]. In The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language  (p. 8). Cambridge: Cambridge University  Press

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