Shakespeare: The Architect of English Language

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People 1564 Shakespeare is born William Shakespeare was an English poet, playwright and actor born in 1564. He had a huge influence on the English language, theatre and literature to the present-day. He is the all-time greatest writer of the English language and many of his works are widely quoted in the history of the English-speaking world. Prior to Shakespeare's time, grammatical rules of English were not standardized and thought his plays, he helped contribute to the standardization of the English language. The English languages owes a great debt to Shakespeare as he invented over 1700 words. He was able to this by changing nouns into verbs, verbs into adjectives, connecting words together, that were never used before and adding prefixes and suffixes to words. He incorporated these …show more content…

During the Early Modern English period, "which" was used to refer to persons as well. The pronoun "that" was commonly used with non-defining relative clauses, for example; "The girl that having failed her exam left college for good." But today, this pronoun is used with defining relative clauses such as "The car that was stolen turned up again." https://www.uni-due.de/SHE/HE_Grammar_EME_nouns.htm#T_Relative pronouns The pronoun There were three significant changes involved in pronouns. Firstly, "thou", "thy" and "thee" were singular forms and "ye", "you" and "your" were plural forms of adjectives in the old English period. However, in Early Modern English, the plural forms (ye, you and your) replaced the singular ones and hence "thou", "thy' and "thee" stopped being used. The second significant change was the introduction of "you" and "ye" as a nominative case. "Ye" was the nominative adjective and "you" was the objective adjective and both were pronounced exactly the same, during the

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