Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Is English Just Anglicized French?

For our French class this week we read an interesting article.  It was an interview with the author of the book, “The Incredible History of French Words in English.”

The article was interesting for a couple of reasons.  The first was just learning about how many English words come from French – something like 30-40%!  I had no idea there were so many.   It’s more than either Latin or German, the other two big sources.

Apparently it all began with the Norman Conquest of 1066, when William the Conqueror brought his language along with his soldiers and his system of governance.  But it has continued through the centuries, helped by the English language’s well-known tendency to absorb words from many sources.

The other interesting thing about the article was the author’s attitude.  While he is bilingual, with an English mother and a French father, he is clearly his father’s son. 

So when he talked about words going from French to English, he used neutral expressions like “the arrival” or “the movement” of new words into English.  But when he talked about the reverse, with words going from English to French, he used a verb phrase we hadn’t seen before – s’immiscer dans”. 

And what does that mean?  “To interfere with.”  Oh, those French!

KVS


http://www.france-amerique.com/articles/2015/03/26/l_influence_du_francais_sur_la_langue_anglaise_est_considerable_et_insoupconnee.html

3 comments:

  1. LOL Another option to translate "s'immiscer" is "to infiltrate".... Wars have started this way!

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  2. English is just a thick layer of French laid on top of a Germanic structural base. Prior to 1066, English, or "Angle-lish", was just another German dialect, from the northwest corner ("angle") of Germany. Even the spelling of Old English was fairly regular, in the German manner. With the arrival of William of Normandy in 1066, the government and the upper classes of English society were quickly taken over by the French, and French became the official language of Parliament and the legal system for the next 300+ years. Thus began the melding of French from the top and German from the bottom that produced what we now know as the English language, complete with its ridiculous spelling!

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  3. My favorite book on the history of the English language is Our Language, by Simeon Potter. https://books.google.fr/books/about/Our_Language.html?id=53w0AAAAMAAJ&hl=en

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