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7 Facts About English You Don't Know by rummeh: 6:31am On Jun 23, 2016
English is a pretty important language, and it’s spoken pretty much around the world. Despite English’s significant role around the world, there’s a lot of interesting facts about the language that most people don’t know about.

1. English Is a Lingua Franca
English is considered my many as the lingua franca of the world. That means it’s the language used as a form of communication between people who speak different languages.
Most speakers of English are non-native speakers. In other words, they weren’t born and raised in places where English is considered a native tongue. It’s also a common second language to learn. According to certain studies, 77 percent of Europeans learn English as a foreign language which is more than any other language taught in school.
English is also the dominant language of science. The Internet is also a place where English triumphs since 80 percent of the world’s information is stored in the English language. Journal research articles have been frequently increasing in the number of English versions being published.

2. English Is A Germanic Language
English is a Germanic language. This doesn’t mean that it’s German, but both languages do come from the same mother language.
English, more specifically, is a West Germanic language. It is a branch of the Germanic family of languages which include Dutch and German. This means that these languages are similar to one another in grammar, vocabulary, syntax and verb usage. Have you ever tried learning German or Dutch? If so, you’ll notice that certain characteristics of both languages will seem oddly familiar..
English has had more than 1,400 years of evolution in order to become the language it is today. The language was brought over by the migration of Anglo-Saxons to the British Isles from Europe. The mixture of the dialects spoken by these people is what formed Old English.

3. English Used To Have Grammatical Gender
When we look at English now, grammatical gender has been limited to gender-specific pronouns such as “He” and “She.” Nouns in modern English have no grammatical gender, and the default “The” is used as the definite article for all nouns. But it never used to be that way.
Old English made extensive use of grammatical gender. In fact, English used to have three gender forms in its grammar. Nouns were categorized into these three classes; masculine, feminine, and neuter. Adjectives, articles, and grammatical cases had to agree with the rules associated of each gender noun class. As you’ve probably already noticed, this is way different compared to the grammar of English today.
In Old English, the word for “sun” was “sunne,” and classified as a feminine noun using the feminine definite article “s?o.” If we were going to say “the sun” in Old English, it would be “seo sunne.” Similarly, the word for “moon” was “mona,” and classified as a masculine noun while the word for “wife” was “wif” and classified as a neuter noun. Both nouns must have definite articles that agree with their gender. “The moon” would then be “se mona,” and “the wife” would be “þaet wif.”

4. English Used To Be Really Complicated
Old English had a complex morphology. It was an extremely inflected language which means that endings were attached to words to convey what was being said. Some endings marked words to indicate which grammatical case they were in—subject, direct object, indirect object, possession, and objects of prepositions. This enabled speakers of Old English to use words in a sentence in a much more flexible order. The word order of modern English is much more important to convey meaning than Old English.
For example, in the English sentence “The dog went to the park,” we can see that the meaning is clear. If we were to change the sentence, however, the meaning changes drastically. “The park went to the dog.” We know that this makes no sense in modern English, but in Old English, the nouns “dog” and “park” would have had endings on them in order to convey what is the subject and what is the indirect object. Therefore, a sentence like “The park went to the dog” would have been completely acceptable in Old English.
It gets even crazier. The endings on these words must agree with the gender of the noun, the number (singular or plural), and the grammatical case. All of these different combinations produces an impressive number of ways to convey speech in English, and is far more complicated than the morphology of modern English.

5. Frisian Is The Closest Living Language To English
Frisian is another West Germanic language spoken in certain areas of The Netherlands and Germany. Linguistically, it’s the closest living relative to English and both are part of the Anglo-Saxon group of languages.
Although similar, Frisian and English are generally not considered mutually intelligible to each other. This means that an English speaker cannot readily understand the Frisian language and vice versa. The Frisian languages have had intense influence by the languages that surround them such as Dutch, Danish, and German. English has also been separated from Frisian for quite some time, and the influences of other languages on English has further contributed to English becoming less similar to Frisian.
However, Frisian and English can be compared using the following sentences which show how close both languages are to one another. Both sentences are pronounced pretty similarly despite the obvious spelling differences:
Frisian: “Buter, brea, en griene tsiis is goed Ingelsk en goed Frysk.”
English: Butter, bread, and green cheese is good English and good Frise.”

6. Some Letters Didn’t Make It
We all remember learning the alphabet when were younger. We used to (some of us still do) recite the songs and nursery rhymes to help us remember all the letters, and which letters come after another for alphabetization. But did you know English had letters we don’t have today?
We talked about Old English and Middle English already, but what we have yet to disclose is the fact that both were written with symbols and letters that look alien to us today. The letters that are commonly known are the thorn, the wynn, the eth, the ash, the ethel, and the thorn with a stroke.
The thorn was used to represent the hard “th” sound that English still has today. If it was still used, the word “the” would look like “þe” in modern day spelling. Similarly, the eth was used to represent the “th” sound in English as well. The only language that still use these symbols are Icelandic and Faroese which makes sense since they’re considered some of the most conservative languages in the Germanic family. The ash symbol (æ) was used to represent the short “a” sound like in the word “cat” while the ethel was used for the sound “oe,” like in the word “phoenix.”
The Wynn was used for the pronunciation of modern English “w.” And the thorn with a stroke was a common abbreviation for the word “that.” Now imagine if we still used these letters in modern English spelling? English would either look pretty awesome or pretty scary to someone who doesn’t know the language.

7.English Made a Lot Of Creole Languages
A creole language is a language that forms when two groups of people come together who do not speak each other’s languages. The two languages mix and form a way of communicating that each group can understand. When the languages first start mixing, the language that forms is called a pidgin language. The speakers of Creole languages are people who are decedents of people who started speaking the pidgin languages as they developed. Creole language usually have expanded vocabularies and a grammar system with rules and features not present in the pidgin language.

There are at least 12 different English-based creole languages in the world. They formed in areas that were British colonies in the Caribbean, parts of Africa, and the Pacific. The most spoken English-based creole language is Jamaican Creole with over 3 million speakers.
The next most common creole language is Bajan, spoken in Barbados. There are also creole languages based off English spoken in the Sea Islands off the coast of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida called Gullah language. The language is spoken by descendants of enslaved Africans who live in these areas.

Source: http://www.newsdoggen.org/2016/06/7-facts-about-english-you-probably-do.html


Dont forget to COMMENT!!!

29 Likes 10 Shares

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by LadyG16(f): 6:32am On Jun 23, 2016
U Sabi am

So correct and educational




FTC
It's me LadyG16 for the 3rd time today
WAILERS I hail ooooo

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Nobody: 6:34am On Jun 23, 2016
Ok...

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by chukxie(m): 6:52am On Jun 23, 2016
Very educational!

1 Like 1 Share

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Kelklein(m): 9:33am On Jun 23, 2016
nice info tho


but seriously don't know what to do wiv it

3 Likes

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by rummeh: 9:49am On Jun 23, 2016
Kelklein:
nice info tho


but seriously don't know what to do wiv it
They are facts.. I think we should know

2 Likes

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by darsilver47(m): 10:47am On Jun 23, 2016
nice info.. cc:Lalasticlala come and see this one
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Kelklein(m): 10:57am On Jun 23, 2016
rummeh:
They are facts.. I think we should know
k
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by frozenSun(m): 1:56pm On Jun 23, 2016
4. [size=14pt]English Used To Be Really Complicated[/size]

Used to be ?
Really ?

Check recent WAEC and JAMB results
Check our babes dem whatsapp and facebook messages

Used To Be Complicated ?

22 Likes 2 Shares

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Akshow: 1:56pm On Jun 23, 2016
K
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by baddyoosha: 1:56pm On Jun 23, 2016
lipsrsealed
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by visijo(m): 1:57pm On Jun 23, 2016
ok, i know now
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Nobody: 1:57pm On Jun 23, 2016
Diz one na fact ?
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Fairgodwin(m): 1:58pm On Jun 23, 2016
Let me book space first, I shall be right back..
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by ALAYORMII: 1:59pm On Jun 23, 2016
What about the Creole they speak in Liberia and Ethiopia


Go Liberia go hear stupid English

You go dey confuse

4 Likes

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by tammie24: 2:00pm On Jun 23, 2016
Nice facts
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by room089: 2:01pm On Jun 23, 2016
Thank God I'm from a francophone country!
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Lilimax(f): 2:01pm On Jun 23, 2016
How about Engligbo language version?(English mixed with Igbo version embarassed

18 Likes 1 Share

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Bigajeff(m): 2:02pm On Jun 23, 2016
Yoruba Language

1 Like 1 Share

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by bolt000(m): 2:02pm On Jun 23, 2016
Seen.
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by weblord1900: 2:02pm On Jun 23, 2016
Hmm. Please tell me what to comment
.i didn't read that novel Up there .
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by OgidiOlu3(m): 2:03pm On Jun 23, 2016
Lemme add;

1.“I am” is the shortest complete sentence in the English language.

2. A pangram sentence is one that contains every letter in the language.
For example, the sentence “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog” is a pangram.

3. There are “ghost words” that mean nothing.
Believe it or not, there are some words that appeared in the dictionary because of printing errors. The nonexistent word “dord” appeared in the dictionary for eight years in the mid-20th century. It became known as a “ghost word.”

4. There’s a name for words that we repeat often.
Words we always use even though they add no meaning or value to a sentence are called crutch words. For example, in the sentence “Then I was like, OMG, then like, he went there, and like…” it is pretty obvious that “like” is the crutch word. “Actually,” “honestly,” and “basically” are also commonly used as crutch words.

5. Swims will be swims even when turned upside down.
Such words are called ambigrams.

6. English is the language of the air.
This means that all pilots have to identify themselves and speak in English while flying, regardless of their origin.

7. Girl used to mean small boy or girl.
The word “girl” was not initially used to refer to a specific gender. It used to mean “child” or “young person” regardless of the gender.

Source: https://www.grammarly.com/blog/10-interesting-english-facts-guest/

27 Likes 4 Shares

Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Mickeywilliams(m): 2:03pm On Jun 23, 2016
Alright.. .
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Jasy(m): 2:04pm On Jun 23, 2016
Ok, seen
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Chuksemi(m): 2:04pm On Jun 23, 2016
I read something about this few days ago. English has indeed evolved.
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by UndisputedBosom(m): 2:04pm On Jun 23, 2016
Noted tongue
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by KaptaynKush: 2:05pm On Jun 23, 2016
rummeh:
English is a pretty important language, and it’s spoken pretty much around the world. Despite English’s significant role around the world, there’s a lot of interesting facts about the language that most people don’t know about.

1. English Is a Lingua Franca
English is considered my many as the lingua franca of the world. That means it’s the language used as a form of communication between people who speak different languages.
Most speakers of English are non-native speakers. In other words, they weren’t born and raised in places where English is considered a native tongue. It’s also a common second language to learn. According to certain studies, 77 percent of Europeans learn English as a foreign language which is more than any other language taught in school.
English is also the dominant language of science. The Internet is also a place where English triumphs since 80 percent of the world’s information is stored in the English language. Journal research articles have been frequently increasing in the number of English versions being published.

2. English Is A Germanic Language
English is a Germanic language. This doesn’t mean that it’s German, but both languages do come from the same mother language.
English, more specifically, is a West Germanic language. It is a branch of the Germanic family of languages which include Dutch and German. This means that these languages are similar to one another in grammar, vocabulary, syntax and verb usage. Have you ever tried learning German or Dutch? If so, you’ll notice that certain characteristics of both languages will seem oddly familiar..
English has had more than 1,400 years of evolution in order to become the language it is today. The language was brought over by the migration of Anglo-Saxons to the British Isles from Europe. The mixture of the dialects spoken by these people is what formed Old English.

3. English Used To Have Grammatical Gender
When we look at English now, grammatical gender has been limited to gender-specific pronouns such as “He” and “She.” Nouns in modern English have no grammatical gender, and the default “The” is used as the definite article for all nouns. But it never used to be that way.
Old English made extensive use of grammatical gender. In fact, English used to have three gender forms in its grammar. Nouns were categorized into these three classes; masculine, feminine, and neuter. Adjectives, articles, and grammatical cases had to agree with the rules associated of each gender noun class. As you’ve probably already noticed, this is way different compared to the grammar of English today.
In Old English, the word for “sun” was “sunne,” and classified as a feminine noun using the feminine definite article “s?o.” If we were going to say “the sun” in Old English, it would be “seo sunne.” Similarly, the word for “moon” was “mona,” and classified as a masculine noun while the word for “wife” was “wif” and classified as a neuter noun. Both nouns must have definite articles that agree with their gender. “The moon” would then be “se mona,” and “the wife” would be “þaet wif.”

4. English Used To Be Really Complicated
Old English had a complex morphology. It was an extremely inflected language which means that endings were attached to words to convey what was being said. Some endings marked words to indicate which grammatical case they were in—subject, direct object, indirect object, possession, and objects of prepositions. This enabled speakers of Old English to use words in a sentence in a much more flexible order. The word order of modern English is much more important to convey meaning than Old English.
For example, in the English sentence “The dog went to the park,” we can see that the meaning is clear. If we were to change the sentence, however, the meaning changes drastically. “The park went to the dog.” We know that this makes no sense in modern English, but in Old English, the nouns “dog” and “park” would have had endings on them in order to convey what is the subject and what is the indirect object. Therefore, a sentence like “The park went to the dog” would have been completely acceptable in Old English.
It gets even crazier. The endings on these words must agree with the gender of the noun, the number (singular or plural), and the grammatical case. All of these different combinations produces an impressive number of ways to convey speech in English, and is far more complicated than the morphology of modern English.

5. Frisian Is The Closest Living Language To English
Frisian is another West Germanic language spoken in certain areas of The Netherlands and Germany. Linguistically, it’s the closest living relative to English and both are part of the Anglo-Saxon group of languages.
Although similar, Frisian and English are generally not considered mutually intelligible to each other. This means that an English speaker cannot readily understand the Frisian language and vice versa. The Frisian languages have had intense influence by the languages that surround them such as Dutch, Danish, and German. English has also been separated from Frisian for quite some time, and the influences of other languages on English has further contributed to English becoming less similar to Frisian.
However, Frisian and English can be compared using the following sentences which show how close both languages are to one another. Both sentences are pronounced pretty similarly despite the obvious spelling differences:
Frisian: “Buter, brea, en griene tsiis is goed Ingelsk en goed Frysk.”
English: Butter, bread, and green cheese is good English and good Frise.”

6. Some Letters Didn’t Make It
We all remember learning the alphabet when were younger. We used to (some of us still do) recite the songs and nursery rhymes to help us remember all the letters, and which letters come after another for alphabetization. But did you know English had letters we don’t have today?
We talked about Old English and Middle English already, but what we have yet to disclose is the fact that both were written with symbols and letters that look alien to us today. The letters that are commonly known are the thorn, the wynn, the eth, the ash, the ethel, and the thorn with a stroke.
The thorn was used to represent the hard “th” sound that English still has today. If it was still used, the word “the” would look like “þe” in modern day spelling. Similarly, the eth was used to represent the “th” sound in English as well. The only language that still use these symbols are Icelandic and Faroese which makes sense since they’re considered some of the most conservative languages in the Germanic family. The ash symbol (æ) was used to represent the short “a” sound like in the word “cat” while the ethel was used for the sound “oe,” like in the word “phoenix.”
The Wynn was used for the pronunciation of modern English “w.” And the thorn with a stroke was a common abbreviation for the word “that.” Now imagine if we still used these letters in modern English spelling? English would either look pretty awesome or pretty scary to someone who doesn’t know the language.

7.English Made a Lot Of Creole Languages
A creole language is a language that forms when two groups of people come together who do not speak each other’s languages. The two languages mix and form a way of communicating that each group can understand. When the languages first start mixing, the language that forms is called a pidgin language. The speakers of Creole languages are people who are decedents of people who started speaking the pidgin languages as they developed. Creole language usually have expanded vocabularies and a grammar system with rules and features not present in the pidgin language.

There are at least 12 different English-based creole languages in the world. They formed in areas that were British colonies in the Caribbean, parts of Africa, and the Pacific. The most spoken English-based creole language is Jamaican Creole with over 3 million speakers.
The next most common creole language is Bajan, spoken in Barbados. There are also creole languages based off English spoken in the Sea Islands off the coast of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida called Gullah language. The language is spoken by descendants of enslaved Africans who live in these areas.

Source: http://www.newsdoggen.org/2016/06/7-facts-about-english-you-probably-do.html


Dont forget to COMMENT!!!




English belongs to the indo European family of languages

English can be used for many purposes I.e ESP : EAP- etc
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Femich18(m): 2:05pm On Jun 23, 2016
Alryt thank you ...I know some already but I have added 1 or 2 new fact...Kudos
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by itzMizELo(f): 2:06pm On Jun 23, 2016
thumbs up to d op....but what r we to do wif d info?
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by johntaiwo123(m): 2:06pm On Jun 23, 2016
K
Re: 7 Facts About English You Don't Know by Ginaz(f): 2:08pm On Jun 23, 2016
English confuse people sha

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