The English Replaced Latin In Science Because

The English Replaced Latin In Science Because




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Answered 3 years ago · Author has 2.4K answers and 2.3M answer views
When (and why) did English replace Latin as the written language of choice in medieval England?
When did English replace Latin as the language of science in Europe?
Why did English not end up a Latin-based language, despite the fact that the Romans controlled what is now England?
The English language gets many of their words from Latin. Where did the Latin get their words from?
Why did Latin 'i' change to English 'j' in the word "adjust", but not in the word "idiot"?
Answered 8 months ago · Author has 8.4K answers and 8.2M answer views
Answered 3 years ago · Author has 2.6K answers and 910.7K answer views
Answered 3 years ago · Author has 4K answers and 1.6M answer views
Why did English emerge as the most accepted language globally instead of, say Latin, Sanskrit, Greek, etc.?
Why does English retain Latin plurals in words of Latin origin when they have become English words already?
Why did we adopt the English language from the Latin language?
In what ways did Latin influence the English language? When and how did it do this?
Why do most English words come from Latin words, are they familiar or did English just turn out that way?
Answered 3 years ago · Author has 10K answers and 12.2M answer views
Answered 1 year ago · Author has 3.6K answers and 12.5M answer views
When did Italian become the language of Italy? Ancient Romans spoke Latin. Modern Italians speak Italian.
Answered 2 years ago · Author has 5.3K answers and 12M answer views
Is English the Latin of the future?
Why do most English words have Latin or Greek roots?
Answered 9 years ago · Author has 13.8K answers and 26.8M answer views
Does Latin pronunciation differ from English pronunciation?
Why isn't English a Latin language?
Answered 9 years ago · Author has 35.2K answers and 28.5M answer views
When (and why) did English replace Latin as the written language of choice in medieval England?
Why did English produce from a single Latin word a diversity of words with slightly different meanings, for example, channel/canal from the same Latin word canalis, noun/name from the same Latin word nomen, and so on?
When (and why) did English replace Latin as the written language of choice in medieval England?
When did English replace Latin as the language of science in Europe?
Why did English not end up a Latin-based language, despite the fact that the Romans controlled what is now England?
The English language gets many of their words from Latin. Where did the Latin get their words from?
Why did Latin 'i' change to English 'j' in the word "adjust", but not in the word "idiot"?
Why did English emerge as the most accepted language globally instead of, say Latin, Sanskrit, Greek, etc.?
Why does English retain Latin plurals in words of Latin origin when they have become English words already?
Why did we adopt the English language from the Latin language?
In what ways did Latin influence the English language? When and how did it do this?
Why do most English words come from Latin words, are they familiar or did English just turn out that way?
Why is Latin called the mother of some languages of Europe, including the English language?
Is English the Latin of the future?
Why is English not considered a Latin language, considering the fact that many English words come from Latin?
If English came from Latin, why is it so different from other Latin languages?
Why do we see most of the English word's root come from Latin or Greek?
When (and why) did English replace Latin as the written language of choice in medieval England?
When did English replace Latin as the language of science in Europe?
Why did English not end up a Latin-based language, despite the fact that the Romans controlled what is now England?
The English language gets many of their words from Latin. Where did the Latin get their words from?
Why did Latin 'i' change to English 'j' in the word "adjust", but not in the word "idiot"?
Why did English emerge as the most accepted language globally instead of, say Latin, Sanskrit, Greek, etc.?
Latin, as an everyday spoken language, gradually split into a variety of dialects spoken in different parts of the western Roman empire. After the western empire collapsed in the 400s CE, those dialects gradually grew further apart until they were no longer the same language. This point was reached around the 700s or so. At that point, Latin was no longer the everyday language of any family, and children no longer learned Latin as their native language.
Latin continued to be a language used by the western Christian church. Because the church was the main institution where formal learning took p
After Rome pulled its legions out of Britain in 410 AD, the native Celtic languages in the Southeastern part of the Isle were displaced by the Anglo-Saxons (Old English) after 448 AD. When Rome was sacked in 455 and 476, that erased any possible chance of Latin returning as a vernacular language like commoners.
In 597 AD, missionaries came to England to convert the largely illiterate Anglo-Saxons, and although English remained the vernacular tongue, Latin displaced it as a language of education, literature, and scholarship.
That remained the case for a good 900 years or so. In terms of Latin lit
English never replaced Latin except in special areas.
Due to ordinary processes of language change, such as invasions, borrowings, and normal changes over time, Latin became Italian. That was in parts of Italy.
Old English (and languages that preceded it in England) changed due to ordinary processes of language change, such as invasions, borrowings, and normal changes over time. That was in parts of the British Isles.
Latin was so well respected that learned men for a long time used Latin to write scientific papers. (I am not sure that it was ever a spoken language at international gatherings.) A
Where and when do you think English replaced Latin? Do you mean as a scholarly language in the sixteenth century? You surely don’t mean as a spoken language.
It didn’t. Latin has never been the day-to-day vernacular in any country where English is now the main language.
Mandarin Chinese ( 官话 ) is equal in value to English, just like any other language. However, it will not be used more often than English in the near future.
(1) Let’s make a quick comparison between the number of fluent speakers of both languages (foreigners) who don’t use it as a language of their daily communication:
For Mandarin Chinese, perhaps a few thousand only?
For English - a few hundred million?
These numbers could change over time, but in the near future I would except this gap to widen. English will continue to be a more popular option of a second lan
It is because we don’t call Italian as Modern Latin like we call the language spoken in Greece today as Modern Greek.
The short answer is: the day in 1861 when Italy unified and acquired an army and a navy . A language is a dialect which has an army and a navy.
The long answer is a bit more complicated.
Italian is basically Modern Latin. It is impossible to say when Italians ceased to speak Latin and began to speak Italian - in a sense they never did .
All Romance languages have evolved from Vulgar Latin - that is; Latin spoken by the common people. All Romance languages are basically dialects of La
It’s possible. Imagine a collapse of the current world-system, and the communications are severed. Even if English had managed to destroy most other languages, this situation could result into an evolution towards an entire new group of languages, the Anglic languages .
Now we would speak Anglustani in India, Anglhua in Singapore, Anglalog in the Philippines, or Bantuglish in the south of Africa. Classical English would turn into a liturgic language, used only by the priestly class.
“The liberal argument is in favor of making the best possible use of the forces of competition as a means of coordi
Because we needed more fancy words.
As silly as that may sound, it’s not too far from the truth.
It’s important to note that although all three are related, English did not come from either Latin or Greek, and certainly not both , as I’ve heard some people suggest.
With the exception of pidgins, but English is not a pidgin, and to my knowledge there never were any major Latin-Greek pidgins. (Please excuse my fantastic MS Paint skills .)
Rather, something closer to this happened:
Oversimplified family tree. See more on said proto-language here .
We certainly do borrow a lot of words from all of the abov
Remember, Latin is not really a dead language. It is still in use in the Vatican, for example. And until relatively recently it was used in academic contexts. For example, I had an elderly physics professor whose father had received a degree in Vienna. He had to give his thesis defense in Latin, and his degree was in Physics! Going back further, through the Renaissance and earlier, Latin was the language of university instruction and church affairs, as well as (in some areas) administration and diplomacy. And of course, you go back earlier, to Roman times, and it was the language of the
Your grasp of the migratory history of Britain is a little tenuous.
They stayed for a few hundred years (quite a lot of them weren’t actually Roman, but let it pass).
They went away again (Well, most of them. Some had intermarried with local girls, and probably stayed, but most of them went).
Some of the Britons they left behind might have picked up a bit of Latin, but I doubt if they used it much once the Romans had gone and there was no-one to talk Latin to.
Then the Saxons arrived, and the Angles, and the Friesians, and the Jutes, from Germany, Fries
http://www.anglo-norman.net/sitedocs/main-intro.html "Anglo-Latin gradually lost ground to Anglo-French in its role as the official language of record at both national and local level, whilst Middle English emerged over time from being a predominantly spoken language to take over from the two others in the fifteenth century as the acknowledged national language, both spoken and written. This simple summary statement, however, hides a complex linguistic interplay brought about by the continuously evolving social situation in Britain and on the continent for many decades after the Conquest."
Often, one word entered English by way of Norman French in the 11th-12th centuries, and another was borrowed directly from Latin, usually in late medieval or Renaissance times.
Sometimes English took in an Old French word after the Norman conquest, and later borrowed a more modern French word. W

When (and why) did English replace Latin as the written language of choice in medieval England?
Answered 9 years ago · Author has 35.2K answers and 28.5M answer views
When did English replace Latin as the language of science in Europe?
Why did the English take over the Latin and French?
If language names generally are named by the name of the country when it is born (English to England), why is Latin not called "Roman"?
How would one say “please let you do x thing” in Latin (vocabulary, English to Latin translation, grammar choice, Latin)?
Answered 8 months ago · Author has 4.2K answers and 549.5K answer views
Why and how did the English stop using French as a living language in England towards the end of the Middle Age?
Answered 11 months ago · Author has 574 answers and 101.4K answer views
Why did English not end up a Latin-based language, despite the fact that the Romans controlled what is now England?
Why isn't English a Latin language?
Answered 3 years ago · Author has 2.4K answers and 2.3M answer views
Answered 1 year ago · Author has 4.2K answers and 6.5M answer views
Which language is English closer to, French, German, or Latin?
Answered 2 years ago · Author has 2.2K answers and 2.2M answer views
How did English survive the French- and Latin-speaking Norman conquerors and become the international language it is now?
Answered 2 years ago · Author has 58 answers and 39.2K answer views
England has been invaded once only by the French Normans. But why was Anglo Saxon English still spoken by most people (even though priests and the nobility knew Latin)?
Updated 3 years ago · Author has 178 answers and 171K answer views
Why did the English take over the Latin and French?
Answered 2 years ago · Author has 1.9K answers and 912.2K answer views
Will the English language eventually go down the same road as the Latin language, in which it became many different languages?
Answered 2 years ago · Author has 2.4K answers and 2.3M answer views
When did English replace Latin as the language of science in Europe?
When did English replace Latin as the language of science in Europe?
Why did the English take over the Latin and French?
If language names generally are named by the name of the country when it is born (English to England), why is Latin not called "Roman"?
How would one say “please let you do x thing” in Latin (vocabulary, English to Latin translation, grammar choice, Latin)?
In what ways did Latin influence the English language? When and how did it do this?
How did the development of English from Anglo Saxon, Latin, Norman and other derivatives actually happen?
When did Latin stop being spoken commonly (among the educated) in the UK?
Did any Latin words enter Old English directly?
How did the Latin language survive in England during the Normans' reign?
When did the language in England switch from French to English?
Is "iura novit curia" correct stylistically (classical Latin, vocabulary, Latin to English translation, grammar choice, meaning, Latin)?
Why and how did the English stop using French as a living language in England towards the end of the Middle Age?
What is the (ancient) Greek equivalent of the Latin prefix re-? I thought perhaps apo- but maybe I am wrong. (I mean re- as in again or back.)
What is the easiest way to learn Latin, Old English, and other medieval languages?
When did English replace Latin as the language of science in Europe?
Why did the English take over the Latin and French?
If language names generally are named by the name of the country when it is born (English to England), why is Latin not called "Roman"?
How would one say “please let you do x thing” in Latin (vocabulary, English to Latin translation, grammar choice, Latin)?
In what ways did Latin influence the English language? When and how did it do this?
http://www.anglo-norman.net/sitedocs/main-intro.html "Anglo-Latin gradually lost ground to Anglo-French in its role as the official language of record at both national and local level, whilst Middle English emerged over time from being a predominantly spoken language to take over from the two others in the fifteenth century as the acknowledged national language, both spoken and written. This simple summary statement, however, hides a complex linguistic interplay brought about by the continuously evolving social situation in Britain and on the continent for many decades after the Conquest."
The “Proceedings in Courts of Justice Act” of 1730 made English the obligatory language (rather than “Law French” or Latin) in the courts of England and Scotland. It was round about this same time that Latin stopped being used in philosophy and science. Isaac Newton wrote his Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica in latin in 1687
It wasn’t that the English peasants stopped speaking French, as most of them never learned it beyond borrowing loanwords.
It was that the Anglo-Norman nobility had gradually stopped speaking French, for several reasons. Let’s do it by phases:
PHASE ONE : Norman Dominance in England and Marriage Ties
Early on, in the first generations after the conquest, England had many ties to Normandy and France through marriage. Heck, William the Conqueror mostly lived in Normandy even after the conquest of England—he merely used English holdings as a giant piggy-bank to support Norman aggression elsewhere on t
OK, it’s a stretch to call English Latin-based, but words of Latin origin outnumber ‘native’ Germanic words in modern English by at least two to one! So it is very arguably a sort of hybrid.
Virtually none of it came directly from the Romans though, who were gone from Britain before the ancestors of the English arrived in number (what effect they did have was on Welsh, not English). Some Latin vocabulary would have come in through the Christianisation of England, but the flood really began when French was imposed by England’s Norman colonisers.
Your grasp of the migratory history of Britain is a little tenuous.
They stayed for a few hundred years (quite a lot of them weren’t actually Roman, but let it pass).
They went away again (Well, most of them. Some had intermarried with local girls, and probably stayed, but most of them went).
Some of the Britons they left behind might have picked up a bit of Latin, but I doubt if they used it much once the Romans had gone and there was no-one to talk Latin to.
Then the Saxons arrived, and the Angles, and the Friesians, and the Jutes, from Germany, Fries
Latin, as an everyday spoken language, gradually split into a variety of dialects spoken in different parts of the western Roman empire. After the western empire collapsed in the 400s CE, those dialects gradually grew further apart until they were no longer the same language. This point was reached around the 700s or so. At that point, Latin was no longer the everyday language of any family, and children no longer learned Latin as their native language.
Latin continued to be a language used by the western Christian church. Because the church was the main institution where formal learning took p
Which language is English closer to, French, German, or Latin?
English and German are both West Germanic languages. We can find a common ancestor back in the centuries before the Anglo-Saxon migration to Britain after the Romans left around 410 AD. The West Germanic languages are part of the larger Germanic branch, which includes the Norse languages (Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic) and the extinct East Germanic languages, like Gothic.
French is a descendant of Latin, like Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, and various regional languages in the former Western Roman Empire. Lati
Latin was the lingua franca of the Church rather than the nobles, and survived until well now actually, but the English church switched to an English bible when James V commanded it. The Church of Rome took a while catching up, but got there eventually: Mass in the vernacular 50 years old this year
The conquerors were pretty much interested i
https://www.quora.com/Why-did-English-replace-Latin
https://www.quora.com/When-and-why-did-English-replace-Latin-as-the-written-language-of-choice-in-medieval-England
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The English Replaced Latin In Science Because


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