No, it didn't. Western dialect is still the same in western England. -Put a man from Torbay with a man from Tyneside and they can barely understand each other.
Shakespearean is not a language. Shakespeare wrote in modern English. If this book was written in English since, it was written in modern English, just possibly more modern than Shakespeare's modern English.
"Ladybird" is a dialect variant of "ladybug." Both mean "Our Lady's bug/bird" and are one of the standard examples of a modern derivative of Old English feminine nouns without -s in the possessive. Presumably, then, a baby ladybird would be a larva or a pupa.
Çanakkale ın western Turkey
It was a trading empire in the Western Mediterranean.
Raja ram mohan roy is correctly called the "father of modern India" because he was the first to realize need of learning english, mathematics, science and western technology to meet the competition which India could face from other developed nations like USA.
please help
Shakespeare wrote in modern English, in the dialect called Early Modern English.
true
Chaucer primarily used the Middle English dialect known as Middle English London, which was spoken in the east midlands region of England during his time. This dialect influenced the development of Modern English.
If anything, it came from 70's 'culture shock', not from any regional British dialect.
Modern English evolved from Middle English, which itself developed from Old English. This process occurred over centuries through various influences, such as the Norman Conquest and interactions with other languages.
"Middle English" is a subset of English. Middle English is the type of English spoken in Chaucer's time, as in _The Canterbury Tales_. English is a language as a whole, but over time, the dialect has changed from Old English, the dialect spoken in _Beowulf_, to Middle English, the dialect spoken in Chaucer's time, in _The Canterbury Tales_, to Modern English, the dialect spoken in Shakespeare's time, in _Hamlet_, to today's English, the dialect I'm writing in right now.
Early Modern English started around 1500. For reference, Shakespeare is in Early Modern English; Chaucer is in the London dialect of Middle English.
Sae is the the Old English ( West Saxon) form of "sea." There is also the modern English word sae, which is the Anglic dialect form of "so."
No, American English is not a form of Old English. Old English refers to the language spoken in England before 1100 AD, while American English developed in the 17th century through the influence of various languages, including British English, Native American languages, and others.
Modern English, the same language I am writing in and you are reading. It is a different dialect called Elizabethan or Early Modern, but the same language, easily comprehensible by English-speakers today.
To simplify a complex subject, the East Midland dialect of Old English became the dominant dialect as it replaced the conservative (as in, little influenced by Scandinavians from the north) Kentish dialect of London. The East Midland dialect had lost many of the inflections of Old English, and after the Norman invasion of 1066, gradually evolved (in part due to a further simplification of inflections as Norman French eventually learned English) with additions from Latin (sometimes from Greek) and French (of various dalects).