in English include William Tyndale’s translation of the
New
Testament (1525) (an event that led to his being burned at the stake,
since it was considered sacrilegious for the bible to exist in any lan-
guage other than Greek or Latin); the King James Version of the
bible (1611) (the first “legal” translation of the bible); Shakespeare’s
First Folio (1623); and the first English-language newspaper,
The Daily
Courant (1702).
The Publication of Dictionaries and Grammars, and the Subsequent
Codification of English: As a language grows in stature, it begins being
codified: dictionaries are written to provide a record of words, their
meanings, and their pronunciations; grammars describe the struc-
ture of a language and often prescribe usage. In the Modern
English period, a number of dictionaries and grammars of English
begin appearing: Samuel Johnson’s dictionary (1755) (the first
major dictionary of English); Noah Webster’s dictionary (1806) (the
first major dictionary of American English); and numerous gram-
mars of English, which begin appearing in the eighteenth century
(e.g. Robert Lowth’s 1762
A Short Introduction to English Grammar).
There were also attempts in the eighteenth century to establish an
“English Academy”: a legislative body similar to the Académie
française (French Academy) that issues proclamations on good and
bad usage. However, attempts to establish an English Academy have
never been successful.
The Colonization of America, its Independence from England, and its Rise as a
Superpower: The colonization of the New World in the seventeenth
century marked the first time that the English language was trans-
planted from England into a new geographical and social context.
Even though the United States eventually gained independence
from England, its colonization marked the beginning of British col-
onization, a process that led, as an earlier section of this chapter
demonstrated, to the transplantation of English all over the world
and the development of many new “Englishes.” More people now
speak American English than British English, and because of its
size, power, and influence, the United States and, consequently,
American English have wielded great power in the world.
While the comparative method involves classifying languages on the
basis of linguistic and non-linguistic evidence, the typological method
relies exclusively on linguistic information and uses this information to
classify languages according to the linguistic characteristics that they
share or do not share. For instance, languages can be classified as having
subject–verb–object word order (SVO), as having subject–object–verb
(SOV), and so forth. Although languages are classified typologically on
the basis of phonological, morphological, and syntactic characteristics
that they share or do not share, much of the research in this area has
been centered on morphology and syntax, and this section explores two
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