| ENGLISH LANGUAGE
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SOME FACTS
English language, member of the West Germanic
group of the Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European
family of languages. Spoken by about 470
million people throughout the world, English
is the official language of about 45 nations.
It is the mother tongue of about 60 million
persons in the British Isles, from where
it spread to many other parts of the world
owing to British exploring, colonizing,
and empire-building from the 17th through
19th cent. It is now also the first language
of an additional 228 million people in the
United States; 16.5 million in Canada; 17
million in Australia; 3 million in New Zealand
and a number of Pacific islands; and approximately
15 million others in different parts of
the Western Hemisphere, Africa, and Asia.
As a result of such expansion, English is
the most widely scattered of the great speech
communities. It is also the most commonly
used auxiliary language in the world. The
United Nations uses English not only as
one of its official languages but also as
one of its two working languages.
There are many dialect areas; in England
and S Scotland these are of long standing,
and the variations are striking; the Scottish
dialect especially has been cultivated literarily.
There are newer dialect differences also,
such as in the United States, including
regional varieties such as Southern English,
and cultural varieties, such as Black English.
Standard forms of English differ also; thus,
the standard British (“the king's
English”) is dissimilar to the several
standard varieties of American and to Australian,
Canadian, New Zealand, and Indian English.
History of English
Today's English is the continuation of
the language of the 5th-century Germanic
invaders of Britain. No records exist of
preinvasion forms of the language. The language
most closely related to English is the West
Germanic language Frisian. The history of
English is an aspect of the history of the
English people and their development. Thus
in the 9th cent. the standard English was
the dialect of dominant Wessex. The Norman
Conquest (11th cent.) brought in foreign
rulers, whose native language was Norman
French; and English was eclipsed by French
as the official language. When English became
again (14th cent.) the language of the upper
class, the capital was London, and the new
standard (continued in Modern Standard English)
was a London dialect.
It is convenient to divide English into
periods—Old English (or Anglo-Saxon;
to c.1150), Middle English (to c.1500; see
Middle English literature), and Modern English;
this division implies no discontinuity,
for even the hegemony of French affected
only a small percentage of the population.
The English-speaking areas have expanded
at all periods. Before the Normans the language
was spoken in England and S Scotland, but
not in Cornwall, Wales, or, at first, in
Strathclyde. English has not completely
ousted the Celtic languages from the British
Isles, but it has spread vastly overseas.
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