Tuesday, September 29, 2015

The English language: a melting pot of different languages

Where do English words come from? As the title suggests, English receives influence from a great deal of languages. In the same way that - as seen in the picture above- America is a melting pot of different cultures, English is a melting pot of different languages.  In this post, I will try to show you some of the languages that deeply influenced the English language and I will try to exemplify it with English words.
First of all, one of the main influences English had was French. In the 11th Century, Edward the Conqueror – who was French - became king. As a result, many French words started to appear in English language. We, as speakers, use these words without realizing they have a French origin. French words influenced started to enter the English language. At some point both the English and the French words managed to coexist, but in different contexts and registers. In this link, you can see more clearly the influence of French in the English language and viceversa, and also the influence of Spanish.  In general, French words are used in more learned formal contexts. For example, the French words have specialized to deal with the meat of animals, whereas the English words depict the animals themselves. Here is a list for you to see what I mean more clearly. 

ENGLISH WORDS
WORDS WITH FRENCH ORIGIN
Pig
Pork (French: ‘porc’)
Deer
Venison (French: ‘venaison’)
Sheep
Mutton (French ‘mouton’)
Ox
Beef (French ‘boeuf’)
Calf
Veal
Motion
Movement
Front of building
Facade  (French ‘façade’)
Feature
Characteristic (French: ‘characteristique’)
Large, splendid
Grand 
Character / VIP
Personage 
Naivety
Naiveté 
Trip
Journey (French ‘journée’) 
Trade
Commerce
Underwear
Lingerie 
Curriculum (Latin origin)
Résumé  
Newspaper
Journal

Moreover, Latin has also influenced English. The influence in Latin is vast, frequently causing the English language to resemble Spanish. Here you have a list of Latin words. My advice is to use Latin words with caution and merely in formal contexts, the English words being far more common:

ENGLISH WORDS
LATIN WORDS
Student
Alumnus (pl. ‘alumni’)
Moon
Lunar (Latin: ‘luna’)
Sun
Solar (Latin: ‘sol’)
Life
Vital (Latin: ‘vita’)
Speed
Rapidity (Latin: ‘rapidus’)/ velocity (Latin: ‘velox’)
Aerial
Antenna (Latin: ‘antenna’)
Marriage
Matrimony (Latin: ‘matrimonium’)
Sell
Vend (Latin: ‘vendere’)
Undefeatable
Invincible (Latin ‘vincere’)
Unreadable
Illegible (Latin: ‘leggere’)
Unbelievable
Incredible (Latin: ‘credere’)
End
Finish/terminate (Latin: ‘finis’/’terminus’)
Start/begin
Initiate (Latin: ‘inicio’)
Unavoidable
Inevitable (Latin: ‘evitare’)
True
Veritable (Latin: ‘veritas’)
Channel
Canal (Latin: ‘canalis’)
Hundred
Century (Latin: ‘centum’)
Head
Capital (Latin: ‘caput’)
Do
Fact (Latin: ‘faccio’)
Keep/carry on
Continue/proceed (Latin: ‘continuare’/ ‘procedere’)
Husband / wife
Spouse (Latin: ‘spondeo’)
Build
Construct (Latin: ‘construo’)
Answer
Respond (Latin: ‘respondere’

English also receives influence from Spanish. Even though some Spaniards find it difficult to speak English, Spanish seems to leave a mark among English speakers. Here you have a list of Spanish words that have successfully entered the English language:

ENGLISH WORDS
SPANISH WORDS EXISTING IN ENGLISH
Nap
Siesta
Party
Fiesta
Canteen
Cafeteria
Coffee shop
Café
Watcher
Vigilante
Alone
Solo
Donkey
Burro
Courtyard
Patio
Friend
Amigo
Village
Pueblo 

There are other languages influencing English such as Italian (‘piano’, ‘tempo’…), Greek (‘philosophy’, ‘telephone’, ‘criterion’), Hebrew (‘kibbutz’), but I will speak about them in another post. As you see, the English language is unique but it also borrows a lot of words from other languages, and has a decisive influence over countless languages throughout the world. This is what makes the English language the most generous language of all, don’t you think ?

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Give me some homographs

Are you familiar with homographs ? They are words spelt the same but with different meanings. Among them, there are some words which, in addition to having different meaning and the same spelling, they are pronounced differently.  Yes, you have heard right. Homographs are but one of the countless quirks of English ! Here I bring you a small selection of them:

1. Read [ri:d] : Infinitive (to watch at written material). 
    Read [red]: The past and participle of the verb 'read'.  
   E.g. I usually read [ri:d] adventure novels but last week I read [red] a romantic novel and I loved it. 

2. Wind [wɪnd]: Air in motion.
    Wind [waɪnd]: To take a curving direction.
    E. g. The wind [wɪnd] blows hard just where the road winds [waɪndz]. 

3. Wound [waʊnd]: The past and participle of the verb 'wind' 
    Wound [wʊnd]: An injury or to inflict an injury.
E.g. He had wound [waʊnd] some wire and he got a small wound [wʊnd] as a result.

4. Minute ['mɪnɪt]: 60 seconds.
    Minute [maɪ'nju:t]: Very small, either in size or in importance.
 E.g. After thinking for a minute ['mɪnɪt],he realized that was but minute [maɪ'nju:t] problem. 

5. Row [rəʊ] (British) or [roʊ] (American): A line of seats or people, or move a boat in a      river using some sticks. 
    Row [raʊ]: An noisy argument.
E.g. In the front rows [rəʊz] of the theatre there was a big row [raʊ] because of the seats  assigned. 

6. Bow [bəʊ] (British) or [boʊ] (American): The tool or gadget to shoot arrows.
    Bow [raʊ]: To bend your body to greet someone showing respect and courtesy.
    E.g. Robin Hood used to bow [baʊ] his enemies before using his bow [bəʊ].

7. Polish ['pəʊlɪʃ] (British)  ['poʊlɪʃ]: A thing or person from Poland. 
    Polish ['pɒlɪʃ]: To make something smoother by rubbing it. 
    E.g. The Polish ['pəʊlɪʃ] guy polished ['pɒlɪʃt]my nails perfectly well.

8. Tear [tɪə] (British) [tɪɚ] (American): Drops of water emerging from your eyes when you   cry or weep.
   Tear [teə] (British) [teɚ] (American): To pull something apart into pieces by force.
    E.g. You'll burst into tears [tɪəz] when I tear [teə] your skin.

9. Dove [d˄v]: A bird of the pigeon family.
    Dove [doʊv] (American): The American irregular past of the verb 'dive'.
    E.g. The man dove [doʊv] into the water to save the dove [d˄v].


10. Live [lɪv]: To inhabit or dwell in a place. 
      Live [laɪv]: Something happening at the moment in front of people. 
      E.g. Today, we will be able to see how beggars live [lɪv] in the street on live [laɪv] TV.

11. Lives [lɪvz]: Third person singular of the verb 'live' (inhabit or dwell).
     Lives [laɪvz]: The plural of 'life', the period or amount of time of living existence of an individual
     E.g. My cat lives [lɪvz] a happy live and much more in we take into account that cats are said to have nine lives [laɪvz].

12. Stress shifts: Some homographs simply change the stress depending on whether they are nouns or verbs. Here you have some examples:

NOUNS
VERBS
Subject [‘s˄bʤəkt]
Subject [səb’ʤekt]
Research [‘rɪs3:ʧ]
Research [rɪ’s3:ʧ
Import [‘ɪmpɔ:t]
Import [ɪm’pɔ:t]
Conduct [kɒnd˄kt]
Conduct [kən’d˄kt]

Well, did you enjoy these homographs ? As you have seen, homographs make English even a more special language. Feel free to comment ! 

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Test your knowledge on irregular verbs

As promised in my post about the quirks of irregular verbs, now you can drop by here to test your knowledge of the different irregular verbs in English. Exercises are graded in degrees of difficulty: level 0 (the usual list you can fin in the most basic books), level 1 (the list that students in 'Bachillerato' receive and study), level 2 (some weird, but somehow familiar, irregular verbs) and level 3 (the most difficult irregular verbs). Have a go at the different tables and tell me in which level you are. Then check your answers down below. Ready, steady, go ! 

Level 0 

INFINITIVE
SIMPLE PAST
PAST PARTICIPLE
Ride


Swim


Read


Blow


Teach


Break


Leave


Bite


Sit


Wake



Level 1

INFINITIVE
SIMPLE PAST
PAST PARTICIPLE
Bleed


Sink


Sweep


Dig


Kneel


Rise


Flee


Bear


Cast


Forbid



Level 2

INFINITIVE
SIMPLE PAST
PAST PARTICIPLE
Dwell


Sting


Beseech


Spit


Sow


Forsake


Bind


Slit


Thrust


Thrive



Level 3

INFINITIVE
SIMPLE PAST
PAST PARTICIPLE
Bereave


Chide


Bid


Slay


Sneak


Crow


Tread


Weave


Shear


Rive



Answers (with the meaning of irregular verbs)

Level 0

INFINITIVE
SIMPLE PAST
PAST PARTICIPLE
MEANING
Ride
Rode
Ridden
To sit on and manage a small vehicle or a small animal, e.g. a horse or a bicycle
Swim
Swam
Swum
To move in the water by using your hands and legs
Read [ri:d]
Read [red]
Read [red]
To look at something written to understand its meaning
Blow
Blew
Blown
To produce air with your mouth
Teach
Taught
Taught
To impart knowledge
Break
Broke
Broken
To fracture and smash something into pieces
Leave
Left
Left
To go out of a place
Bite
Bit
Bitten
To cut something with your teeth
Sit
Sat
Sat
To rest the body on a chair or some kind of seat
Wake
Woke
Woken
The opposite of ‘sleep’

NOTES: 'Ride' is conjugated as 'stride'
               'Swim' is conjugated as 'ring', 'drink', 'begin', 'sink', 'stink' 'spring' and 'shrink'

Level 1

INFINITIVE
SIMPLE PAST
PAST PARTICIPLE
MEANING
Bleed
Bled
Bled
To lose blood
Sink
Sank (or sometimes 'sunk')
Sunk (or 'sunken', especially as an adjective)
To descend into the water involuntarily
Sweep
Swept
Swept
To remove the dust with a broom
Dig
Dug
Dug
To remove earth with a shovel or spade
Kneel
Knelt
Knelt
To lean on your own knees
Rise
Rose
Risen
To move from a lower to higher position
Flee
Fled
Fled
To escape from a danger
Bear
Bore
Borne (born as an adjective)
To give birth, or to support something
Cast
Cast
Cast
To throw or drop something
Forbid
Forbade (or forbad or forbid)
Forbidden (or forbid)
To ban or prohibit

NOTES: 'Kneel' is conjugated as 'weep', 'sweep' and 'creep'

Level 2

INFINITIVE
SIMPLE PAST
PAST PARTICIPLE
MEANING
Dwell
Dwelt/dwelled
Dwelt/dwelled
To live or inhabit
Sting
Stung
stung
To pick someone with a sharp poisonous part of the body, e.g. jellyfish sting with their tentacles
Beseech
Besought/beseeched
Besought/beseeched
To beg or ask urgently
Spit
Spat (or spit)
Spat (or spit)
To expel saliva
Sow
Sowed
Sown (or sowed)
To scatter seeds on the ground for plants to grow
Forsake
Forsook
Forsaken
To abandon
Bind
Bound
Bound
To tie something with a rope or similar or to put a bandage on someone
Slit
Slit
Slit
To cut something deeply
Thrust
Thrust
Thrust
To push forcefully
Thrive
Throve (or thrived)
Thriven (or thrived)
To prosper or grow well, to flourish

NOTES:  'Seek' is conjugated as 'beseech'
                 'Sting' is conjugated as the verbs 'wring', 'swing', 'spin', 'stick', 'slink' and 'fling'
                 'Sow' is conjugated as 'mow' and 'showed'
                 'Bind' is conjugated as 'grind' and 'wind'
                'Strive' is conjugated as 'thrive'

Level 3

INFINITIVE
SIMPLE PAST
PAST PARTICIPLE
MEANING
Bereave
Bereft/bereaved
Bereft/bereaved
To deprive someone of something and make them miserable
Chide
Chid (or chided)
Chidden (or chided)
To nag someone or to express disapproval
Bid
1) Bade
2) Bid
1) Bidden
2) Bid
1) To command or say a greeting
2) To offer a certain amount of money for an object
Slay
Slew
Slain
To kill violently
Sneak
Sneaked/snuck
Sneaked/snuck
To move without being noticed
Crow
Crew (British) / crowed (American)
Crowed
To cry of pleasure
Tread
Trod
Trodden
To step or stomp
Weave
Wove (or weaved)
Woven
To lace thread or something similar together to form a whole
Shear
Sheared
Sheared/shorn
To remove hair from an animal
Rive
Rived
Rived/riven
To tear or rend apart

How did it go ? Did my test make you sweat ? If you want to keep learning more irregular verbs, here you have a list of them. Some verbs are missing (like 'beseech') but it is quite a good list. I hope you keep practising them so as not to forget them !