新标准大学英语三unit9

上传人:宝路 文档编号:48310501 上传时间:2018-07-13 格式:PPT 页数:93 大小:5.96MB
返回 下载 相关 举报
新标准大学英语三unit9_第1页
第1页 / 共93页
新标准大学英语三unit9_第2页
第2页 / 共93页
新标准大学英语三unit9_第3页
第3页 / 共93页
新标准大学英语三unit9_第4页
第4页 / 共93页
新标准大学英语三unit9_第5页
第5页 / 共93页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述

《新标准大学英语三unit9》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《新标准大学英语三unit9(93页珍藏版)》请在金锄头文库上搜索。

1、Text Whats in a Name?1 Today its only the exceedingly famous who are known by just one name, but even Sting, Cher and Madonna started life with a surname. In England alone there are around 45,000 different surnames. But prior to 1000 AD in Britain, everyone was known by the given name only, or perha

2、ps their nickname.Text 2 Different areas of the world adopted surnames at different periods in time. The Chinese were among the first people to use family names to honour their parents from about 2800 BC. In Europe, the Romans started calling people by their given name and family name in Latin from

3、300 BC, but it wasnt common practice throughout Europe until the 10th or 11th century, when first, the lords and gentry, then middle-class citizens, and finally everyone used surnames. Text The necessity for surnames arose when the population began to grow. Suddenly there was more than one person wi

4、th the same name in a village, so surnames were used. Generally, these surnames were not handed down to the next generation, but after the fall of the Roman Empire, Ireland was one of the first countries to adopt hereditary surnames, and Irish surnames are found as early as the 10th century.Text 3 A

5、s communities grew, it became necessary to identify residents more specifically with a name which referred to a dominant feature such as a physical attribute, an occupation, or a place of origin. This led to names like John the Butcher, William the Short, Henry from Sutton, Mary of the Wood, and Rog

6、er, son of Richard.Text 4 After the Norman Conquest of England, the new rulers (from Normandy in northern France) of the realm obliged people to adopt fixed surnames for administrative reasons, as a form of registration for the census and for taxation. Gradually, most Saxon and Celtic names vanished

7、 (Oslaf, Oswald, Oswin Os meaning God), and we see names like Carpenter, Thatcher, Cook and Baker, Hill, Forest. Any man who left his home and moved to another part of the country would be called by the place where he came from, eg John of York, and other immigrants from Ireland, Highland Scotland a

8、nd Wales (when it became part of Great Britain in 1536) adopted the English system of surnames.Text 5 Surnames from places were most common. In fact, more than half of English surnames today derive from geographic descriptions: Bedford, Berkley, Hampshire could have been names given to people who mi

9、grated from these places to live and work elsewhere, or may have been the names of the landowners where they lived.Text 6 A name ending in -man or -er usually suggests a trade or occupation, although as the spelling was only fixed in the 19th century, they often look different from the original word

10、, for example Latimer meaning ranslator, and Jenner, engineer. Personal or moral qualities generated names as well: Good, Goodchild, Thoroughgood, and Blake (Black).Text 7 Many surnames come from someones relationship with another, such as Williamson (Williams son). This naming pattern between a fat

11、her and his heirs can be seen clearly in Sweden, where each successive generation followed suit: The so-called Hans Peterson would be the son of Peter, and Hans Petersons son would be called Jan Hanson. (On the female side, the daughter of Hans would be called Hansdotter.)Text The Norman French adde

12、d Fitz- to mean child of as in Fitzpatrick, the child of Patrick. The Irish used O, as in OBrien, the Dutch used van (van Buren), the French used de (de Gaulle), Arabic speakers used ibn (ibn Saud) and the Scottish used Mac (MacDonald). Next time you feel like a hamburger, try asking for a “son of B

13、ig Donald“, please a big Mac.Text 8 A historic event, such as invasion by a foreign power, has often had an effect on surnames, especially when the official language of the newly-created colony was changed. This is particularly noticeable in regions of Central and Eastern Europe, where the borders a

14、nd the language used within them have changed several times over recent years. When the English invaded Ireland in the 1660s, and English became the legal language, Gaelic names were anglicized or translated into English.Text 9 Its often possible for Westerners to recognize the nationality or origin

15、 of people by their names, but this is much more difficult for Asians to do. There are as many rules about this as there are names but we can suggest some very general guidelines about given names. Basically, if a given name ends in -e or -a, it may be a womans name. If it ends in a consonant, its p

16、robably a mans name. Text If a name ends in -e, -tte, or -elle (Marie, Yvette or Isabelle), it probably belongs to a French woman. Remember also that many French womens names are the male version with the additional -e. If a name ends in -a, its likely to be an Italian or, less likely, a Spanish or Russian name (Maria, Alessandra; Ana, Juliana; Olga, Natal

展开阅读全文
相关资源
正为您匹配相似的精品文档
相关搜索

最新文档


当前位置:首页 > 中学教育 > 教学课件

电脑版 |金锄头文库版权所有
经营许可证:蜀ICP备13022795号 | 川公网安备 51140202000112号