therer is no he or ye
Elizabethan English is Modern English, just an early form of it.
Initially the Tudors spoke welsh. Later they spoke Early modern English.
The Early Modern English period not only provided us with an astonishing amount of wonderful literature, not only from the big names of Spenser, Shakespeare and Milton, but also from numerous other lesser writers and the compilers of the King James Bible but also saw a huge increase in English vocabulary as a result of these writers, and a long-term influence on style, particularly by Shakespeare and the Bible.
Old English, also known as Anglo-Saxon, was the language spoken in England from the Germanic invasions in the 5th century until the twelfth century. To a modern reader it looks like a foreign language, and it shares many features with German, including a four-case noun declension, grammatical gender, and strong and weak adjective declensions. An example of a text in Old English is the anonymous epic poem Beowulf, which begins: Hwæt! We Gardena in geardagum þeodcyninga þrym gefrunonhu ða æþelingas Ellen fremedon.Middle English, which developed from Old English with significant influece from Norman French, was spoken between the twelfth century and the great vowel shift, which began in the mid-fifteenth century. Middle English had a simplified grammar and a much more familiar look, but it would have sounded quite different from modern English by virtue of its vowels, which still had their European values (e.g., long 'i' was pronounced like modern English long 'e', as in French or Spanish). A representative Middle English text is Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales:Whan that Aprille with hise shoures soote,The droghte of March hath perced to the roote,And bathed every veyne in switch licourOf which virtu engendred is the flour . . .Modern English is the form of English spoken since about the middle of the fifteenth century, encompassing both Shakespeare (Early Modern English, c. 1450-1650) and the contemporary language. A representative Early Modern English text is William Shakespeare's Sonnet XVIII:Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?Thou art more lovely and more temperate:Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,And summer's lease hath all too short a date . . .
== == The difference between the palaeolithic communities and the neolithic communities is that the palaeolithic communities has to do with the early part of Stone age(the very early period of human history when tools and weapons were made of stone)while the neolithic communities is connected with the latter part of the Stone age.
The difference between early tools and modern tools is that early tools were made from stone but modern tools are made from metals.
Elizabethan is an early form of Modern English. Although it retains some words and usages now archaic or obsolete, it differs mostly in pronunciation.
Early humans were hunter-gatherers, relying on hunting and gathering for food. They lived in small, nomadic groups. Modern humans have settled in permanent communities, practice agriculture, and have more complex social structures. They also have access to technology that early humans did not, leading to significant advancements in various aspects of life.
The English language is about 1500-2000 years old. Modern English is somewhere between 300 and 400 years old--Shakespeare wrote in Early Modern English.
had more sophisticated tools and art, as well as a more complex social structure than Neanderthals.
The transition between Middle English and Modern English took place slowly and at different times in different places. Chaucer (1380) is clearly Middle English, and Shakespeare (ca. 1600) is clearly Early Modern. Malory's Morte D'Arthur (1485 or so) is probably the earliest major work which is Early Modern English. The distinction between Early Modern English and later kinds of Modern English is harder to draw, because Early Modern English is essentially Modern English with occasional aspects of older English. These older aspects only gradually became less common in English and some of them have still not disappeared. (Consider, for example, Darth Vader's line "What is thy bidding, my master?") An end date for Early Modern of the end of the seventeenth century is somewhat arbitrary but as good as any other.
gummy bears
The word since existed in Early Modern English.
The most obvious difference is early transport was muscle powered (animal or human) whilst most modern forms of transport are machine powered.There is also a huge difference in speed and endurance.
Early Modern English was first written in 1500 and finished in 1800.
EARLY MODERN ENGLISH is what it is really called.
The four stages of the English language are Old English, Middle English, Early Modern English, and Modern English. These stages mark the historical development and evolution of the language over time.