
Imagine stepping into an early twentieth‑century classroom where a seasoned scholar guides a group of eager students through the tangled history of English vocabulary. The lectures unfold as a conversational tour, weaving together Latin, Greek, and Anglo‑Saxon roots while illustrating how everyday words have shifted in meaning across centuries. Listeners are treated to vivid examples that bring old texts to life, making the evolution of language feel both scholarly and surprisingly relatable.
An attentive editor adds square‑bracketed footnotes that spotlight historic missteps and modern corrections, turning the original 19th‑century assertions into a living dialogue with contemporary linguistics. These marginal comments reveal how scholars once linked seemingly unrelated words—like ‘care’ and ‘cura’—and how later research reshaped those connections. For anyone fascinated by the way language mirrors culture, the work offers a clear, engaging map of English’s past, inviting listeners to trace the roots of familiar expressions and discover unexpected linguistic ancestors.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (437K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Malcolm Farmer, Amy Cunningham, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2007-03-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1807–1886
A churchman with a deep love of language, this 19th-century scholar helped shape how English speakers think about words, meaning, and history. Alongside his religious work, he wrote poetry, biblical studies, and influential books on the English language.
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