Y05W29RC Words with History

This week, you will explore how words can change as people use them in new ways. You will practise noticing examples, working out meanings from context and thinking about why language does not stay still. A word you know today may have had a different life before.

Informative — Feature article

A feature article is an information text that explains a topic in an engaging way for readers. Writers use it to inform by mixing facts, explanations and interesting examples that make the topic feel lively and easy to follow. It often includes a strong opening hook, clear subheadings and sections that each focus on one main idea. As a reader, you need to follow how the examples connect to the big idea and notice what each section adds to your understanding. You are learning information, but you are also seeing how a writer makes that information interesting.

Before You Read

  • Look at the title and notice that it suggests words can have a past as well as a present.
  • Think about how some words you hear today may sound different from the way older people use them, or may mean something new in technology and everyday life.
  • Get ready to use the subheadings as guides, because each one will show a different way words can change.

While You Read

  • Pause after each section and check what kind of change the writer is explaining.
  • Use the hook and subheadings to track how the article moves from one idea to the next.
  • Notice the examples carefully and connect each one to the main reason language changes.
  • When you meet an unfamiliar word, use the nearby sentence to work out its meaning from context.
  • If two examples seem similar, re-read them and look for the small difference in how the change happened.

Read With Purpose

  • Notice the different reasons words can change over time.
  • Pay attention to how the examples explain meaning, spelling or pronunciation shifts.
  • Watch how the article shows that language changes through people, places and history.

Now read

The feature article

~4 min read · ~581 words

How Words Change Over Time

Have you ever heard an adult use a word in a way that sounds old-fashioned, or noticed that one word can mean different things in different places? Words are not frozen. They move with people, places and time. That means a word’s meaning, spelling or pronunciation can shift as life changes around it. English is full of these changes, which is one reason the language stays lively and surprising.

New meanings for old words

Sometimes a word keeps the same spelling but grows a new meaning. Long ago, the word ‘mouse’ meant only the small animal. Now it can also mean the hand-held tool used with a computer. The old meaning did not disappear. The word simply stretched to fit a new invention.

The same thing has happened with the word ‘tablet’. It once meant a flat slab or writing surface. Today, many people also use it for a portable screen device. When new tools become part of daily life, existing words are often reused because they already feel familiar.

Even the word ‘viral’ has changed in everyday use. In science, it relates to a virus. Online, however, people also use it to describe something that spreads quickly across the internet. These changes do not happen because language is getting worse. They happen because people need words that match the world they live in.

Borrowed words travel too

English is famous for collecting words from other languages. A borrowed word is a word taken in from another language and used so often that it becomes part of everyday English. This does not make English weaker. It shows how languages meet, share and adapt.

In Australia, you can hear borrowed words in many places. The word ‘kangaroo’ came into English from an Aboriginal language. So did other place names and cultural words that are deeply connected to Country, history and knowledge. These words remind us that language carries stories as well as meanings.

English has also welcomed words such as ‘piano’ from Italian, ‘kindergarten’ from German and ‘chocolate’ through languages that carried it across countries and centuries. Once a borrowed word settles in, people may stop thinking of it as borrowed at all. It simply becomes one more part of the language.

Spelling shifts over time

Words do not only change in meaning. Their spelling can shift too. Sometimes this happens slowly, over many years, as one version becomes more common than another. Sometimes dictionaries and publishers help settle a standard spelling, but that can take a long time.

A famous example is ‘music’, which was once spelled in several different ways in older English texts. Another example is ‘publick’, an older spelling of ‘public’. Over time, many spellings became shorter or more regular. This made reading and printing easier.

Different English-speaking countries can also prefer different spellings. In Australian English, for example, we write ‘colour’ and ‘favourite’, while American English uses ‘color’ and ‘favorite’. Neither version is silly. They are just different spelling paths that grew from the same language.

Wrap-up

So why does language change? New inventions appear. People travel. Cultures meet. Communities develop their own habits. Writers, speakers and readers all help shape what stays and what shifts. A language changes because people use it, and people never stay exactly the same.

That means every time you notice a new meaning, an unexpected spelling or a word from somewhere else, you are spotting language history in action. Words are not only tools for speaking. They are little time travellers.

Check your vocabulary knowledge

frozen adj.
fixed and unable to change
portable adj.
easy to carry from place to place
familiar adj.
already known and easy to recognise
adapt v.
change to suit new conditions
standard adj.
accepted as the usual form