Unit 8. Standardisation and Prescriptivism
Unit 8. Standardisation and Prescriptivism
Unit 8. Standardisation and Prescriptivism
Standardisation and
prescriptivism
OUTLINE
• Standardisation
o Requisites
o History of the English written standard
• Prescriptivism
o Aims
o Views on language change
Standardisation I
EModE is the period of the start of standardisation.
• A standard language is one that has minimal variation of form and maximal
variation of function.
o Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385): Go, litel bok, go, litel
mym tragedye… / And for ther is so gret diversite / In Englissh and
in writyng of oure tonge, / So prey I God that non myswrite the, /Ne
the mysmetre for defaute of tonge.
o Type II: nine manuscripts from ca 1350 from the Greater London
(political and economic centre) area (Norfolk and Suffolk features)
o Type III: texts copied in London from ca 1380 (variety of the best
Chaucerian manuscripts; some Central Midlands features)
Hire is a native form. Yafe has a native pronunciation. Gaf has Scandinavian
pronunciation.
Monolingual dictionaries dealing with the whole lexicon. Every polite word
is a word accepted to be in a dictionary.
Prescriptivism I: Aims I
18th-19th Centuries. How to talk correctly. Period of grammar, where we have
spelling and pronunciation guides.
Ascertainment
Prescriptivism I: Aims II
Need to perfect the standard and fix correct uses in dictionaries, grammars
and spelling guides
o Robert Lowth (1710-87): A Short Introduction to English Grammar
(1762). The most influential grammar of the period.
Development of the “canon”, who are the authors that have to help.
o Double negatives
o Split infinitives
o Preposition stranding
No only with dicitionaries and grammars you are going to fix the language.
Academies to rule the language. They have the power to control the
language but none of them could prevent language changes.