Saturday, October 7, 2023

Anglo-Saxon vs. Latinate Voice . . . or How to Write with Style!

Anglo-Saxon words derive from the languages spoken by Germanic settlers arriving in England from the fifth century. Latinate words derive from the British Isles’ interactions with the Roman Empire and later medieval France.
Modern English is a mercurial mix of the two, breaking down to 60% Latinate and 25% Anglo-Saxon, with the rest being a mix of several other global influences.
So, what’s the real bloody difference when it comes to writing?
Voice, tone, and readability.
Anglo-Saxon words are short and straightforward, for example: think, pick, help, eat and drink. They have hard sounds like CK or the hard “g” and are also more concrete, which makes them easier to picture.
Latinate words are multisyllabic and cerebral, for example: imagine, select, assist, consume and imbibe. They are softer, flowery, and more musical.
Latinate words are often more nuanced and precise, and usually sound posher and more proper, while writing with Anglo-Saxon words is more direct.
If you need help differentiating the two, remember “short for Saxon, long for Latin.”
There was a period in English history when the language of the upper class was significantly influenced by the French, thereby Latin, language. While the lower class spoke Old English, which has primarily German influences.
Words of Latinate origin were the language of aristocrats and intellectuals, which come off as scholarly and sophisticated. Words of Anglo-Saxon origin were the language of the ‘common folk’, which come off as simple and blunt.
The distinction matters in various parts of your writing because it defines the tone and readability of your scenes. Action scenes are often better served with Anglo-Saxon words to afford them a sense of urgency and to provide a faster flow of reading. Exposition scenes are often better served with Latinate words to afford them a slower sense of nuance and to provide a more poetic flow of reading. 
It all comes down to description, really.
This also applies to dialogue in various ways.
Take the fantasy genre, for example. There’s a big difference in the way a well-educated noble speaks compared to an uneducated peasant farmer:

Noble: “I shall frequent the establishment a final time and imbibe in excess before taking my departure and retiring to my residence.”

vs.

Peasant: “I’m going to stop by the tavern and get drunk before going home and sleeping it off.”

or

Noble: “I’m well exhausted and exceedingly famished after spending the day laboring.”

vs.

Peasant: “I’m very tired and hungry after working all day.”


If you have your poor, unschooled peasant speak like a rich, well-educated noble (or vice versa) without a logical explanation as to why then you remove the believability of the personalities you intend them to represent.
Knowing this distinction also provides you plenty of options, because you can apply various subtleties to your characters by having your rough-and-tumble streetwise cop fighting a robber into handcuffs during one scene then the next you hint at his finer education at Harvard before he decided to drop out of college and take up the badge by showing him wearing a tuxedo and rubbing elbows with highbrows at a snooty wine-tasting extravaganza while he’s secretly scoping out a potential perpetrator. Or maybe the straight-laced CEO businesswoman, when relaxing with her closest friends, enjoys getting drunk and gambling while swearing like a sailor, which hints at her rather crude upbringing before her advancement into a more sophisticated path of life.
A great example of this is the 2009 film Sherlock Holmes starring Robert Downey Jr. One moment the eccentric detective is brilliantly deducing clues while deliberating with Dr. Watson then the next he’s bare-knuckle boxing while utilizing his superior intellect and martial skills to impressive effect against his physically intimidating opponent.
These distinctions add interesting depth to your characters, helping present them as three-dimensional persons of interest instead of flat and boring stereotypes, limited only by how you choose to apply them, as well influencing the tone and flow of your writing.

A quick list of examples of Anglo-Saxon vs. Latinate words include:

angry vs. furious
ask vs. inquire
baby vs. infant
begin vs. commence
belief vs. credence
belly vs. abdomen
burn vs. incinerate
cold vs. frigid
come vs. arrive
cry vs. lament
drink vs. imbibe
eat vs. consume
end vs. terminate
friendly vs. amicable
give vs. provide
go vs. depart
god vs. deity
green vs. verdant
ground vs. terrain
hate vs. detest
height vs. altitude
help vs. assist
horse vs. equestrian
job vs. profession
know vs. recognize
length vs. longitude
light vs. illumination
loving vs. amorous
match vs. correspond
mean vs. intend
meet vs. encounter
mistaken vs. erroneous
nightly vs. nocturnal
old vs. ancient
pick vs. select
put out vs. extinguish
rot vs. putrefy
shy vs. timid
sight vs. vision
smart vs. intelligent
stop vs. arrest
teach vs. educate
tired vs. exhausted
understand vs. comprehend
wage vs. salary
watchful vs. vigilant
whole vs. entire
width vs. latitude
wise vs. prudent
wish vs. desire
work vs. labor
youth vs. adolescence

Stephen King is the perfect example of a writer who relies heavily on the Anglo-Saxon voice while sprinkling in just enough granules of the Latinate throughout his novels to add vernacular spice to his stories. Because King’s writing comes off as conversational in that it almost feels as if he’s sitting there beside you and telling you the story while you’re reading it. He doesn’t use a profusion of complex words you have to pause and look up to define, or employ lengthy strings of purple prose in the hopes of impressing you with his extensive vocabulary we already know he possesses. Instead he keeps things elementary, and for that his books are beloved by millions of readers the world over and by people from every background imaginable.

Here’s a parting tip to keeping your sentences short and to the point like King when writing in Anglo-Saxon voice: if you are tempted to write the word ‘and’ or ‘but’ in the middle of a sentence, consider if it might not be better to close the sentence and start another.

*For further consideration on what is known as 'Anglish' please visit this link: ANGLISH

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