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History of English: Difference between revisions

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[[Self-Demonstrating Article|What you're reading right now]] ([http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LuN6gs0AJls Not the band]).
 
As a written language, Modern English until only relatively recently (we're talking into the 1700's) did not have standardized spelling rules--the same word might be written differently within even the same sentence. This can be seen in any text of the time that has not been edited to make the spellings consistent. Many of the standards people are familiar with were not set until the first dictionaries were printed, and even a good number of those have morphed over time. This also accounts for various spelling differences between British English and American English (and, to a lesser extent, Canadian English), with the two sides of the Atlantic mostly--apart from Webster's meddling--standardising (or, for Americans and Canadians, standardizing) their orthography around different variant spellings of the same words. [[Separated by a Common Language|Vocabulary differences]] tend to describe inventions or institutions with their origins in the 19th or early 20th centuries; as late as just before [[World War OneI]] it was the thought that American and British English would ultimately evolve into completely separate languages. Then came mass telecommunications.
 
== Thou, thee, and you ==
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Hollywood History]]
[[Category:History of English]]
[[Category:Useful Notes/Europe]]
[[Category:History of English{{PAGENAME}}]]
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