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编辑于2021-09-30 21:07:38Geography, People and Language
Geography
Geographical features(as a whole)
The British Isles =The Great Britain+Ireland
Britain(U.K.)=The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland=The Republic of Ireland+The United Kingdom
The United Kingdom=England+Scotland+Wales+Northern Ireland
Climate
maritime climate
Reason
Britain is an island country and the surrounding sea gives England a varied climate and it's difficult to predict.
Main Characteristics
Temperate, with warm summers, cool winters
plentiful precipitation throughout the year
Three principal features
winter fog
rainy days
instability/changeability
months
Spring: March-May
Summer: June-Augest
Autumn: Septempter-November
Winter: December-early March
Factors Influencing English Weather
the surrounding waters
the prevailing south-west winds or the Westerlies blow over
The North Atlantic Drift
Major cities
England——London
Scotland——Edinburgh
Wales——Cardiff
Northern Ireland——Belfast
People
Population density and distribution
Overall population: about 66.57million(2021)
England: 53(m) first
Scotland: 5.2(m) second
Wales: 3.1(m) third
Northern Ireland: 1.8(m) fourth
White British——87.5%
White Irish——1.2%
White——5.3%
Origins of population
Majority: offspring of the Anglo-Saxons
Most people in Wales, Acotland and Ireland are descendants of the Celtic poeple, Indians, Greeks, New Zealanders, Australians, etc. as permanent residents.
A large number of immigrants from Afria and Asia.
Language
1. Old English (5th-1066AD)
Influenced by
Old Norse
spoken by Vikings, German and Dutch
Latin and Greek words
with the introduction of Christianity
Danish words
Making an impact on the English language at the very begining
Germanic—Everyday words
Christian—Religious words
Vikings—Action-man words
What kind of vocabulary was brought into English?
house, woman, martyr, bishop, font, ransack, thrust, die, give, take
mutually intelligible language among Angles, Saxons, and Jutes;a few Celtic words spoken by native Britons
Literature: Beowuf
2. Middle English(11th-15th)
Status
French replaced English as the official language, and English became the language of lower class. eg: pig-pork, sheep-mutton, cattle-beef
development
English increased in importance after the Black Death
Literature: Geofery Chaucer
3. Modern English(15th~)
The printing press-brought standardization of English
Samuel Johnson's dictionary-estabished a standard form of spelling
Renaissance-assimilated foreign words throughout the Renaissance
The Industrial Revolution-necessitated the introduction of new words for new things and ideas
The rise of the British Empire or the Commonwealth of Nations-led to the assimilation of words from many other languages
Literature: Shakespeare
4. Standard English
printing press by William Caxton in 1476
Frist English dictionary by Samuel Johnson in 1755
UK
Geographical location
an island country/located in the northwestern Europe
surrounded by North sea(east), Atlantic ocean(north), Irish sea(west and between Great Britain and Ireland), English Channel and Strait Dove(south)
It is one of the countries with longest coastline
Location
Latitudes 49°N and 61°N and longtitudes 8°W to 2°E
Territory
244,820 square kilometers
Physiographical Features
the Highland Zone of the north and west
the Lowland Zone of the south and southeast
England: lowland terrain, mountainous terrain
Scotland:(Ben Nevis is the highest point in UK) lowlands(south and east) and highland(north and west)
Wales: mountainous
Northern Ireland:hilly
Rivers and Lakes
The longest river: Severn River (Wales)
The second longest river: Thames (England)
The largest Lake: Lough Neagh (Northern Ireland)
Most Important in Scotland: The Clyde River
Four Parts
England
a flatland country, also called Lowland zone
highly urbanized
physically largest with largest populations
Lake District: a scenis sopt in North West England, famous for its lakes and its mountains
Scotland
a mountainous country
The Hhighlands in the north
Ben Nevis is the highest mountain in the UK
a country of castles
culture is best represented by their dress(kilt) and music(babpipes)
Wales
Smaller than Scotland or England, but larger than Northern Ireland
Everyone in Wales speaks English, but 20% of the people also speak Welsh.
an agriculture society until Industrial Revolution
a mining and manufacturing society
mostly rural, low hills, rugged coastline
Northern Ireland
Family of languages
contains from top to bottom
Indo-European family
be made up of most languages of Europe, the Near East, and India
classification: according to similarity and their geographical distribution, the surviving languages of Indo-European language family fall into 10 principal groups, which can be grouped into an Eastern set and Western set.
English belongs to Germanic.
Germanic group
West Germanic group