Middle English

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Middle English is the language spoken in England, Scotland, and Ireland during the Middle Ages. The marker of the beginning of the Middle English era is The Battle of Hastings and the marker of the end of it is the Great Vowel Shift.

Middle English
Englich/English
Spoken in: Great Britian, Ireland, United States, Australia, Canada, New Zealand amongst others.
Conworld: Real world
Total speakers: 350-400 million native.
Genealogical classification: Indo-European
Germanic
West Germanic
     Anglo-Frisian
       Anglic
Middle English
Basic word order: SVO,
Morphological type: Isolating (mostly)
Morphosyntactic alignment: nominative-accusative
Writing system:
Created by:
unknown Great Vowel Shift-Present C.E.

Stages

English has had 4 primary stages:

The separation of Anglo-Saxon from Middle English is marked by The Battle of Hastings in 1066. Although that is the official marker, the language took many years to become creolised. It was likely the 12th century or so before the two languages fully mixed and became Middle English. Before then, it was probably Anglo-Saxon spoken by the common folk and Norman French spoken by the Nobles and higher ups. Mostly likely there was a creole between the two in the stages before it was creolised, sometimes called Anglo-Norman. The separation of Middle English and the Modern English stages is the Great Vowel Shift.

Modern English words have many different origins, but a majority come from Anglo-Saxon, Old Norman French, and a little Old Norse. However in the global world today, many words from many other languages have entered the English language.

Middle English also has different stages, with earlier texts such as Brut, which has a heavy Anglo-Saxon vocabulary, to Geoffrey Chaucer, who helped to standardise English (do to the early printers such as William Caxton).

Dialects

For more, try Middle English Dialects.

Middle English Dialects

There are five major dialects of Middle English. Those are:
West Midlands
East Midlands
Northern Middle English
Southern Middle English
Kentish Middle English
Often the West Midlands and East Midlands dialects are put together and are called Midlands. The Northern dialect is often called Northumbrian dialect.
The most famous Middle English writer, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote in the London dialect, which was a part of the Midlands dialect. The Northern Dialect has a heavy influence from Old Norse. The two primary texts in which dialect appears are the Reeve's Tale and The Second Shepard's Play. In the Reeve's Tale, by Geoffrey Chaucer, two Northern students have a run-in with a Midlands Miller. Chaucer uses the dialect for humourous effect. In the Second Shepard's Play which is written in the Northern dialect, a messenger tries to trick the shepards by using a Midlands or Southern accent, to no avail.

Phonology

It should be noted that the pronunciation does differ by dialect.

Consonants

Consonants
Bilabial Labiod. Inter-dental Alveolar Post-alv. Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n (ŋ)
Plosive p b t d k g
Fricative f v θ ð s z ʃ ʒ ç x h
Affricate ʦ ʣ ʧ ʤ
Approximants & glides ʍ w j
Trill r
Flap ɾ
Lateral Approximant ɬ l

Notes:

  • Đ,ð and Þ,þ were still commonly used for /ð/ or /θ/, although th was beginning to be used.
  • Ʒ,ʒ were used to represent gh in Older texts, later it was replaced with gh. It also was used for the sound /j/ which g had sometimes been.
  • Occasionally Æ, æis seen for /æ/.
  • The Middle English r was likely trilled or flapped.
  • The sound /ʧ/ was represented by tch, cch, and in some cases ch.
  • The diagraph gh represented /ç/ when next to front vowels (i, e), and /x/ when next to back vowels (a, o, u). In older texts such as Brut this might be represented by h such as is seen in Anglo-Saxon texts.
  • The diagraphs hw, hl, and hn (the latter two are rare, but exist) are pronounced /ʍ/, /ɬ/ and /n̯/ respectively.
  • All letters are pronounced, and the combination kn is thusly pronounced /kn/.
  • ci and ce are often pronounced was a /s/ sound.
  • gi and ge, as well as j, were often pronounced /ʒ/ although sometimes it was /ʤ/.
  • In most cases, the fricatives /s/, /f/, and /θ/ become voiced in the case of being between vowels or intervocalic (much like those in Anglo-Saxon). This means they become /z/, /v/, and /ð/ respectively. An example that was carried to Modern English might be irregular nouns such as wif vs. wives.

Vowels


Vowels
Front Central Back
Unround Rounded Unrounded Rounded
High iː - ɪ yː - ʏ uː - ʊ
Mid eː - ɛ ə/ʌ oː - ɔ
Low æ aː/a
All entries are: Tense - Lax

Grammar

Nouns

Middle English nouns had long lost the noun genders that had been dying in the Anglo-Saxon era. There were were a few endings which did imply feminine and masculine, such as the feminine ending -esse, which is where we get the ending -ess in Modern English.

Number

There are two numbers in Middle English, since the Dual number from Old English was dropped. This leads the two numbers, Singular and Plural which are still in Modern English. The common ending for the plural was written -es. Quite a few irregular nouns still existed and have various endings.

Cases

The case system was pretty much settled into the forms that exist in English today. There were two forms, the general form, and the genitive.

Articles

In Middle English there are two standard types of articles: Definite Articles and Indefinite Articles. By the Middle English era, the Modern standard articles were pretty stable as the and a/an. The indefinite article may have been used more often as an, especially in the early centuries of Middle English, because it reflects the original spelling and the words shared roots with the number one. Other spellings of it could include on, ane, anne, en, enne, and ene. The definite article had other forms including de, þeo, te, þea, þie, and the contracted form th'.

Personal Pronouns

Adjectives

Verbs

Present

Past

Modals and Auxiliaries

Subjunctive

Texts