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[...]... part in the earlier historyof English; the catalogue of languages which later came to inXuence it is far wider still The focus in the Wnal three chapters ofthe volume is, in various ways, placed on English looking a historyoftheenglish language 5 outwards, with reference in particular to the diVusion ofEnglish (and Englishspeakers) outside the British Isles—and to the complex intersection of extralinguistic... Standard English, there must be a hundred who do not, and another hundred who speak other varieties as well as the standard Where is their a historyoftheenglish language 3 story told?’.1 The historyofthe English language in the following pages engages with both domains—documenting the rise of a standard variety, but also continuing to examine the import of regional speech, not only in Middle English. .. diversity ofthe speakers who make up theEnglish language’ Rather than a seamless synecdoche of thehistoryof English with the historyofthe standard variety, the image ofthe past that is explored over the course of this volume is therefore one characterized by its heterogeneity, and by the ebb and Xow of a language (and language-varieties) continually on the move As David Crystal has recently... aspect of a historyofEnglish tracing the multilingual historyofEnglish from the Renaissance (and before), he adds too the salutary reminder that, for much of this past, it was the skill oftheEnglish in assuming new languages which was celebrated (rather than that linguistic incapacity which has come to form a sad part of their modern stereotyping) ‘No one man’s English is all English , wrote the. .. which included those ofthe Native American inhabitants ofthe continent as well as the non -English languages of immigrants from other European countries and elsewhere around the globe As a result of their geographical separation, the language ofthe Englishspeaking migrants began to differ from that of their previous neighbours in Britain Given what we know ofthe natural development of languages, we... is the subject and which the object ofthe verb superavit (‘overcame’) The order ofthe words the sole means of indicating the 14 terry hoad diVerence between the equivalent sentences in modern English is here more susceptible of variation for stylistic eVect In Latin, therefore, provided the forms ofthe words remain unchanged, the sense too will be unaltered, irrespective ofthe order in which the. .. fragmentary; if the primary form of language is speech, only with the advent of sound recording (and the invention ofthe phonograph in 1877) do we begin to 2 lynda mugglestone have a record ofthe actual voices ofthe past—and even this evidence is necessarily partial and selective The majority of speakers through thehistoryofEnglish have left not a single trace to document the words they spoke, or the conversations... time) For these and other reasons, the emphasis throughout the following volume is placed on the construction of ‘a history rather than thehistory , recognizing that many other pathways could be navigated through the past—and present of theEnglish language The wider emphasis throughout is, however, placed on the twin images of pluralism and diversity, and on the complex patterns of usage which have... retained their ancestral languages (German or Italian, for example) in full and active use alongside theEnglish which they had also acquired These new speakers ofEnglish included many ofthe previous inhabitants ofthe continent and their descendants the Native American peoples—who came to use English preliminaries: before english 9 alongside or, in many cases, instead ofthe languages which they and their... HE English language is at more than one point in its history a language which is being carried from one part ofthe world to another This is true at the beginning of its existence as a recognizably distinct language the phase which this and later chapters refer to as Old English Migration of people and the consequent relocation ofthe languages they speak will therefore be one ofthe major themes of . (amongst others) emphasize the diversity of the speakers who make up the English language’. Rather than a seamless synecdoche of the history of English with the history of the standard variety, the. languages they speak will therefore be one of the major themes of this chapter, which will focus on the pre -history of English and the various developments which underpin the creation of English as. for the diversity of the history of English, enabling a variety of perspectives on the reconstruction of the past to be adopted and applied. The examination of social networks and chains of linguistic