Normalisation of the English Language
Normalisation is the fixing of the norms and standards of a language to protect it from corruption and change.
Type of Standard
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Written Standard
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Spoken Standard
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Time Limits
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by the 17th c.
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end of the 18th c.
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Sources
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Language of Chaucer
(the London Dialect)
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private letters;
speech of characters in drama;
references to speech be scholars.
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Peculiarities
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1. less stabilised than at later stage;
2. wide range of variation (spelling, gr. forms, syntactical patterns, choice of words, etc. );
3. rivalry with Latin in the field of science, philosophy, didactics.
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1. As spoken standard the scholars considered the speech of educated people taught at school as “correct English”. This was the speech of London and that of Cambridge and Oxford Universities.
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The normalisation of the English language started in the 17th – 18th c. In 1710 Jonathan Swift published in his journal “The Tatler” an article titled “A Proposal for Correcting, Improving and Ascertaining the English Tongue”. J. Swift was a purist (struggled for the purity of the language) and suggested that a body of scholars should gather to fix the rules of the language usage.
The Normalisation of the English language consisted in publishing:
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