English Vocabulary Elements
Fascination with words-their meanings, origins, pronunciation, usages-is something most of us experience at some point. This book aims both to fuel and to satisfy that fascination.The book is based on a course that each of the authors helped to develop at Stanford University over the past twenty years. The aim of the course was to help students master English vocabulary and to provide the fundamentals for pursuing an interest in English words. To this end, the book offers a detailed but introductory survey of the developments that have given English a uniquely rich vocabulary, taking into account both the changing structure of the language and the historical events that shaped the language as a whole. Anyone who believes that changes in the language are robbing it of its elegance or expressive power will see this view challenged by the developments described here.At the core of the book are a set of several hundred vocabulary elements that English borrowed, directly or indirectly, over the past fifteen hundred years, from Latin and Greek. These elements, introduced gradually chapter by chapter, provide a key to understanding the structure and meaning of much of the learned vocabulary of the language.The chapters trace the history and structure of English words from the sixth century onward, laying out the major influences that are still observable in our vocabulary today. Each chapter ends with a large number of exercises. These offer many different types of practice with the material in the text, making it possible to tailor the work to different sets of needs and interests.Upon finishing this textbook, students will be able to penetrate the structure of an enormous portion of the vocabulary of English, with or without the help of a dictionary, and to understand better how an individual word fits into the system of the language.This second edition incorporates improved and refined text as well as examples and exercises, with thorough revision of pedagogy as a result of their significant classroom-based expertise. The new edition also updates cultural references, accounts for variations in pronunciation among students, and clarifies when historical details are important or peripheral.
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English Vocabulary Elements
User Review - lutzsaa - Overstock.comExcellent book for non-English native speaking people and for anyone who wants to speak, write and understand the language better. I would definitely recommend this book to my friends. Read full review
Review: English Vocabulary Elements
User Review - Adel Rahimi - Goodreadsit was rather boring cos there were a lot of details, so i had to skip some parts Read full review
Contents
The Prehistory of English and the Other IndoEuropean Languages
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189 |
Later Changes From Latin to French to English
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207 |
221 | |
249 | |
277 | |
299 | |
305 | |
Common terms and phrases
ablaut acronym adjective affix allomorphs alveolar ancestor basic called classical Latin compound consonant definition Deletion derivational dictionary diphthongization Element Gloss Source English vocabulary English words etymology find first flow following words fricative function Germanic languages Gloss Source Examples Greek hypernym Indo-European languages inflectional endings laryngeal Latin and Greek Latin Vowel Weakening Latin words learned letters lexeme lexical linguistic lips literally meaning metaphor metonymy Middle English Modern English modified morph morpheme morphological component nasal native Norse noun obstruents Old English oral stops original palate parse perfect participle phemes phonetic phonological place of articulation plural polysemy prefix pronounced pronunciation Proto-Indo-European refer root rule semantic change singular sound changes speak specific speech spelling stem suffix suffixes syllabic consonants syllable symbols tense thing tion tongue variation velar verb vocal voiced voiceless Vowel Shift West Germanic languages word elements word’s