English is a West Germanic language that became the global lingua franca of trade, science, and digital culture. Its analytic grammar, vast borrowed lexicon, and flexible word order make it unusually adaptable across registers.

English
English · english · London, England, United Kingdom · 51.5074, -0.1278 · United Kingdom · United States · Canada · Australia · Ireland · New Zealand · India · South Africa

Historical Evolution

English descends from the Anglo-Frisian dialects brought to Britain by Germanic settlers after the Roman withdrawal. Old English absorbed substantial Norse vocabulary through Viking contact, then underwent radical restructuring after the Norman Conquest introduced thousands of French and Latin loans. Early Modern English stabilized spelling partly through printing, while colonial expansion and American rise spread standardized varieties worldwide.

Phonology

Modern English maintains a comparatively large vowel inventory—often 20 or more phonemic vowels in RP and General American—with extensive diphthongization. Consonantal features include dental fricatives /θ, ð/ (rare cross-linguistically), syllable-final obstruent clusters, and variable rhoticity. Stress is lexically unpredictable and often shifts meaning in noun–verb pairs (REcord vs reCORD).

Syntax

English is canonically SVO with prepositions and post-modifying relative clauses. It has largely shed inflectional case except in pronouns, relying on word order and auxiliaries for tense, aspect, and voice. A productive determiner system, periphrastic passives, and a rich modal auxiliary paradigm support nuanced epistemic and deontic expression.

Attributes

Total Speakers1500 M
L1 Native Speakers380 M
Number of Countries67 countries
Language Vitality Index10 scale
Web Domain Share (%)55.4 %
Language FamilyIndo-European / Germanic / West Germanic
Standard ScriptLatin (English alphabet)
Grammatical TypologySVO, Analytic
UNESCO Risk CategorySafe
Clear