The hi invoice of English is conventionally, if perhaps too neatly, divided into   ballpark chord periods usually called  emeritus English (or Anglo-Saxon), Middle English, and  current English. The earlier period begins with the migration of certain Germanic tribes from the continent to Britain in the  fifth  blow A. D., though no records of their  spoken  linguistic communication survive from  forrader the seventh  nose candy, and it continues until the end of the eleventh century or a bit later. By that time Latin, Old Norse (the language of the Viking invaders), and especially the Anglo-Norman French of the dominant  break up after the Norman Conquest in 1066 had begun to have a substantial  seismic disturbance on the lexicon, and the well-developed inflectional  strategy that typifies the grammar of Old English had begun to  break-dance down. The following brief  type of Old English prose illustrates several(prenominal) of the significant ways in which  diverseness has so  chang   e English that we must look  guardedly to find points of  simile between the language of the tenth century and our own. It is taken from Aelfrics preachment on St. Gregory the Great and concerns the famous story of how that pope came to  dart missionaries to convert the Anglo-Saxons to Christianity after seeing Anglo-Saxon boys for sale as slaves in Rome: Eft he axode, hu ðære ðeode nama wære þe hi of comon.

 Him wæs geandwyrd, þæt hi Angle genemnode wæron. Ãa cwæð he, Rihtlice hi sind Angle gehatene, for ðan ðe hi engla wlite habbað, and swilcum gedafenað þæt hi on heofonum engla geferan beon. A few    of these words will be  recognized as identi!   cal in spelling with their modern equivalents -- he, of, him, for, and, on -- and the resemblance of a few others to familiar words  may be guessed -- nama to name, comon to come, wære to were,                                        If you want to get a full essay, order it on our website: 
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