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#4 Why Does English Have Weird Spelling?

#4 Why Does English Have Weird Spelling?

FromThe Level Up English Podcast


#4 Why Does English Have Weird Spelling?

FromThe Level Up English Podcast

ratings:
Length:
19 minutes
Released:
May 15, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Show notes page - https://levelupenglish.school/podcast4Become a Level Up Member - https://levelupenglish.schoolTranscript - https://levelupenglish.school/transcripts (Members Only)Expression of Today: Turophobia - is the fear of what?Muhammed asked on Facebook “Why are there some letters that we don’t pronounce?” For example: Know, Listen, Often, Neighbour29% of English is French (France was the main language after the 1066 invasion for 600 years)Examples of French words: Beef, Pork, Pastry, Salad, Portrait, Capitalism, Camoflague26% of English is from Germanic languages (including Old English, Old Norse and Dutch)Old Norse words are often concrete nouns, things we can feel. They often have hard consonants, such as "dirt, gun, club"Words with silent Ks usually come from Old Norse and the K used to be pronounced. Over time, the pronunciation changed but the spelling remained the same.In Old English, the E used to be pronounced. "Bite" used to have two syllables. 6% of English comes from Greek  - it’s a very old language and supposedly the first to use an alphabet with vowels (AEIOU) and consonants (BCDFG). Philosophy (pronounced like "FILO..")Phobia (something you’re scared of)English also likes to borrow words from other languages. Tsunami, karate (Japanese) Caravan (Persian-->French-->English)Know - Comes from old English. The K has stopped being pronounced.Listen - Also form Germanic languages. The T is quite hard to say so probably why it stoppedOften - Middle English - Can be pronounced both waysNeighbour - Old English -  from nēah ‘nigh, near’ + gebūr ‘inhabitant, peasant, farmer’Game of Thrones Expressions"Lady of Winterfell, [it] has a nice ring to it"If something "has a nice ring" that means it sounds good or is pleasing to the ear."Sir John? That has a nice ring to it""It had its moments"This means that an event was not completely boring or terrible. Some parts were fun or interesting."The party last night had its moments""I’m sure you weren’t thrilled to hear the Lannister armies are marching North."To be thrilled means to be happy about something."I'm sure you weren't thrilled to see it's raining today."You have been listening to The English With Michael Podcast. To view the podcast notes for this episode and to listen to previous episodes, head over to ewmichael.com/podcast------------------Website: www.ewmichael.comEmail: info@ewmichael.comInstagram: @english_with_michaelFacebook: /englishwithmichaelYoutube: /c/englishwithmichael
Released:
May 15, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

I'm Michael Lavers and this podcast will help you improve your English. I'm an online English teacher for students learning as a second language. In this podcast, I answer your questions about learning and help you achieve your goals in British English. Once a month I talk to a teacher or expert on topics related to language.