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449
ORIGINS
In the evolution of English, three fundamental stages are recognized: Old English, also known as Anglo-Saxon, dated between the year 449 and 1066 or 1100; Middle English, which covers the period of time between the years 1066 or 1100 to 1500; and the modern, with two stages, the classical, from 1500 to 1660, and the contemporary, from 1800 to the present day. -
1100
PROTOINGLÉS
1100 YEARS Ago Germanic invaders from southern Denmark, northern Netherlands and northeastern Germany spoke various dialects typical of their regions that formed the first English or Old English that began to be spoken in Britain, which consisted of a strange hodgepodge of vocabulary, syntactics, and grammar from various dialects and languages. https://abctranslink.com/blog/origen-idioma-ingles/ -
1201
OLD ENGLISH
Until the end of the 12th century. The Germanic language displaced the indigenous British language in what would later become England; the original Celtic languages remained in parts of Scotland, Wales, and Cornwall. The dialects spoken by the Anglo-Saxons form Old English (also called Anglo-Saxon)
https://www.greelane.com/es/humanidades/ingl%C3%A9s/old-english-anglo-saxon-1691449/ -
1300
INTERMEDIATE ENGLISH
Middle English is the name given in historical philology to the various forms that the English language spoken in England took symbolically from the late 11th century to the late 15th century. Middle English was heavily influenced by Anglo-Norman as later by Anglo-French.https://learnenglihs.wordpress.com/2013/04/21/historia-del-idioma-ingles/ -
EARLY MODERN ENGLISH
English was standardized from the London dialect and spread through government and administration as well as the effects of the printing press. By the time of William Shakespeare (mid-16th century), the language was already recognized as modern English. In 1604 the first English dictionary (Table Alphabeticall) was published.
https://oxfordenglishblog.wordpress.com/2014/03/21/ingles-medio-ingles-moderno-temprano-pagina-4/ -
FIRST ENGLISH TEACHER
FIRST TEACHER OF ENGLISH
Gabriel Meurier first teacher of English as a foreign language -
THE FIRST DICTIONARY OF ENGLISH
In 1755, Samuel Johnson published the first dictionary of English (A Dictionary of the English Language). The main difference between Early Modern English and Late Modern English is in vocabulary. Late modern English has more words arising from two factors: the Industrial Revolution and technology and the British Empire, which would cover a quarter of the world with which English will adopt many words from many countries. -
MODERN ENGLISH
In 1755 the differences between IMTem were defined. and IMTar. The latter influenced by the industrial revolution and the British Empire. The distinctions are normally drawn between the early modern period (approximately 1450-1800) and the late modern English (1800 to the present day).
https://www.greelane.com/es/humanidades/ingl%C3%A9s/modern-english-language-1691398/ -
NATURAL DIRECT METHOD
A It arises at the end of the XIX century, in opposition to the traditional method of grammar-translation. This method is not based on an explicit linguistic theory, but is based on the idea that language is a communication tool used in concrete situations every day. -
AUDIO LINGUAL
The audio-lingual method for teaching was born during the Second World War. It consists of teaching the new language by reading a dialogue or text and carrying out oral repetition exercises.https://blog.languagejourneys.com/es/el-metodo-audio-lingual/ -
COMMUNICATIVE APPROACH
Communicative Language Teaching, CLT) es un enfoque en la enseñanza de idiomas en el que se da máxima importancia a la interacción como medio y como objetivo final en el aprendizaje de una lengua. https://blog.languagejourneys.com/es/el-metodo-audio-lingual. https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%A9todo_comunicativo#:~:text=El%20m%C3%A9todo%20comunicativo%20o%20ense%C3%B1anza,el%20aprendizaje%20de%20una%20lengua. -
ACTUALLY
English is the mother tongue of more than 350 million people, so it is not surprising that despite the forces that tend to homogenize it today (the Internet, television, cinema, etc.), there are differences in the way of speaking or writing it.