Eng-gí

From Tâi-oân-pit
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Eng-gíEng-lân chāi-tē ê giân-gí, tī Bí-kok, Liân-ha̍p Ông-kok, Ka-ná-tah, Ò-tāi-lī-a, Ài-jí-lân, Niú-se-lân, kiam Ka-lí-buh Hái kap Thài-pêng-iûⁿ ê chi̍t kóa hái-sū kok-ka lóng sī chú-iàu giân-gí.

Le̍k-sú

Johnson sû-tián lāi ê chi̍t tōaⁿ.

Eng-gí sī sio̍k Ìn-Au giân-gí-hē (Indo-European languages). Eng-gí hoat-tián kòe-têng tiong ū kúi-ê tiōng-iàu ê le̍k-sú sū-kiāⁿ. Tāi-seng sī Jute lâng, Saxon lâng, kap Angle lâng tī 5 chì 6 sè-kí tī Britain khiā-khí; sòa--lo̍h-lâi sī 597 nî St. Augustine ê lâi kàu kiam Latin Ki-tok-kàu ê éng-hióng; koh lâi 9 sè-kí ê Viking lâng chhim-ji̍p; 1066 nî kóng Hoat-gí ê Norman lâng ê cheng-ho̍k; kàu 1362 nî iau-kiû hoat-īⁿ ēng Eng-gí ūn-choán ê Piān-hō͘ Hoat-lēng (Statute of Pleading) pan-pò͘; 1476 nî William CaxtonWestminster ê ìn-soat sū-gia̍p khai-ki; 16 sè-kí ê Lu-né-sàn-suh (Renaissance); 1611 nî James Ông Sèng-keng ê chhut-pán; 1755 nî Samuel Johnson ê sû-tián; kiam 17 sè-kí tī Pak Bí-chiu kap Lâm Hui-chiu, koh ū 18 sè-kí tī Ìn-tō͘, Ò-chiu, Niú-se-lân ê hoat-tián.

Chham-chiàu

  • "[1]". Encyclopædia Britannica.