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B1 Intermédiaire Anglais 6:58 Educational

ENGLISH.

Vsauce · 4,427,700 vues · Ajouté il y a 3 semaines

Statistiques d apprentissage

B1

Niveau CECRL

5/10

Difficulté

Sous-titres (121 segments)

00:00

Hey, Vsauce Michael here, and today, we're going to talk about this.

00:05

What's happening right now— the English language.

00:09

A language spoken by more than a billion people with many, many different accents.

00:14

And according to last year's Harvard Google study,

00:17

a language with more than a million words

00:20

growing at a rate of 8500 new words every single year.

00:25

But we're getting ahead of ourselves. Where did English begin?

00:29

Well, for that answer, we're going to have to go all the way back to the year 400,

00:33

and even earlier to this little Germanic peninsula

00:37

jutting off at an angle inhabited by people who appropriately were called Angles.

00:42

Now, these Angles began immigrating to an island named Britain.

00:46

In fact, there were so many Angles there,

00:48

you may as well have called it Angle Land.

00:51

Angle Land, England.

00:54

Before they had Latin characters,

00:57

they wrote their language not in letters, but in what are known as roons.

01:01

And everything was fine and dandy until 1066

01:05

when the Normans invaded and won.

01:09

One of the neatest changes that still affects us today

01:11

is the fact that this new Norman ruling class

01:14

would refer to the meat they were served using their own words like beef or pork.

01:19

But the poor old Anglo Saxons who had to tend to the animals

01:22

still used their early old English words, for instance, cow and pig.

01:28

And to this day, that is why English is one of the very few languages on Earth

01:32

that has a different name for the meat of an animal than the name of the animal it came from.

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