View Single Post
 
Old Apr 11, 2018, 01:20 PM
ArcheM ArcheM is offline
Veteran Member
 
Member Since: Dec 2016
Location: Russia
Posts: 634
Quote:
Originally Posted by OctobersBlackRose View Post
That's really interesting, so pretty much all German speaking countries had to learn new spelling of words (or something like that), amd yeah English speaking countries would never agree on anything like that. I mean the U.S. pretty much speaks a simplified version of English compared to other English speaking countries. The only major changes to the English language were going from old English to middle English then now to current (modern) English. Though I read the book Faust in highschool for class, which is all in old or middle English and I could barely comprehend it.
I doubt it could have been Old English, because that's pretty much a different language (incidentally, containing pretty much all the funny verb endings we've been talking about, although I suspect with Anglo-Saxon peculiarities). Nor real Middle English - I've just checked, and Faust was only written at the end or after the Middle English period... But even so, when did you last read Shakespeare? Or indeed, any 19th century book? I mean, I opened Mark Twain recently (not one of his two famous works), and that's pretty tough on the brain - all the colloquial language is different, a lot of phrasal verbs don't mean the same thing...

Okay, I suppose that infodump serves only to once again demonstrate how fascinated I am by language. I don't suppose you'd be interested in the convoluted evolution of the Dutch language?
__________________
Social anxiety and possible Aspergers (undiagnosed, but it helps to let you know to more quickly find a common ground).

Life is a journey without a destination.