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History of French

French is a Romance language (meaning that it is descended primarily from Vulgar Latin) that specifically is classified under the Gallo-Romance languages.

The discussion of the history of a language is typically divided into "external history", describing the ethnic, political, social, technological, and other changes that affected the languages, and "internal history", describing the phonological and grammatical changes undergone by the language itself.

External social and political history edit

Roman Gaul (Gallia) edit

Before the Roman conquest of what is now France by Julius Caesar (58–52 BC), much of present France was inhabited by Celtic-speaking people referred to by the Romans as Gauls and Belgae. Southern France was also home to a number of other remnant linguistic and ethnic groups including Iberians along the eastern part of the Pyrenees and western Mediterranean coast, the remnant Ligures on the eastern Mediterranean coast and in the alpine areas, Greek colonials in places such as Marseille and Antibes,[1] and Vascones and Aquitani (Proto-Basques) in much of the southwest.[2][3] The Gaulish-speaking population is held to have continued speaking Gaulish even as considerable Romanisation of the local material culture occurred, with Gaulish and Latin coexisting for centuries under Roman rule and the last attestation of Gaulish to be deemed credible[4] having been written in the second half of the 6th century about the destruction of a pagan shrine in Auvergne.[5]

The Celtic population of Gaul had spoken Gaulish, which is moderately well attested and appears to have wide dialectal variation including one distinctive variety, Lepontic. The French language evolved from Vulgar Latin (a Latinised popular Italic dialect called sermo vulgaris), but it was influenced by Gaulish.[6][7] Examples include sandhi phenomena (liaison, resyllabification, lenition), the loss of unstressed syllables and the vowel system (such as raising /u/, /o//y/, /u/, fronting stressed /a//e/, /ɔ//ø/ or /œ/).[8][9] Syntactic oddities attributable to Gaulish include the intensive prefix ro- ~ re- (cited in the Vienna glossary, 5th century)[10] (cf. luire "to glimmer" vs. reluire "to shine"; related to Irish ro- and Welsh rhy- "very"), emphatic structures, prepositional periphrastic phrases to render verbal aspect and the semantic development of oui "yes", aveugle "blind".

Some sound changes are attested: /ps//xs/ and /pt//xt/ appears in a pottery inscription from la Graufesenque (1st century) in which the word paraxsidi is written for paropsides.[11] Similarly, the development -cs- → /xs//is/ and -ct- → /xt//it/, the latter being common to much of Western Romance languages, also appears in inscriptions: Divicta ~ Divixta, Rectugenus ~ Rextugenus ~ Reitugenus, and is present in Welsh, e.g. *seχtansaith "seven", *eχtamoseithaf "extreme". For Romance, compare:

Both changes sometimes had a cumulative effect in French: Latin capsa → *kaχsacaisse (vs. Italian cassa, Spanish caja) or captīvus → *kaχtivus → Occitan caitiu, OFr chaitif[12] (mod. chétif "wretched, feeble", cf. Welsh caeth "bondman, slave", vs. Italian cattivo, Spanish cautivo).

In French and the adjoining folk dialects and closely related languages, some 200 words of Gaulish origin have been retained, most of which pertaining to folk life. They include:

  • land features (bief "reach, mill race", combe "hollow", grève "sandy shore", lande "heath");
  • plant names (berle "water parsnip", bouleau "birch", bourdaine "black alder", chêne "oak", corme "service berry", gerzeau "corncockle", if "yew", vélar/vellar "hedge mustard");
  • wildlife (alouette "lark", barge "godwit", loche "loach", pinson "finch", vandoise "dace", vanneau "lapwing");
  • rural and farm life, most notably: boue "mud", cervoise "ale", charrue "plow", glaise "loam", gord "kiddle, stake net", jachère "fallow field", javelle "sheaf, bundle, fagot", marne "marl", mouton "sheep", raie "lynchet", sillon "furrow", souche "tree stump, tree base", tarière "auger, gimlet", tonne "barrel";
  • some common verbs (braire "to bray", changer "to change", craindre "to fear", jaillir "to surge, gush").;[13] and
  • loan translations: aveugle "blind", from Latin ab oculis "eyeless", calque of Gaulish exsops "blind", literally "eyeless"[14][15] (vs. Latin caecus → OFr cieu, It. cieco, Sp. ciego, or orbus → Occ. òrb, Venetian orbo, Romanian orb).

Other Celtic words were not borrowed directly but brought in through Latin, some of which had become common in Latin, braies "knee-length pants", chainse "tunic", char "dray, wagon", daim "roe deer", étain "tin", glaive "broad sword", manteau "coat", vassal "serf, knave". Latin quickly took hold among the urban aristocracy for mercantile, official and educational reasons but did not prevail in the countryside until some four or five centuries later since Latin was of little or no social value to the landed gentry and peasantry. The eventual spread of Latin can be attributed to social factors in the Late Empire such as the movement from urban-focused power to village-centred economies and legal serfdom.

Franks edit

In the 3rd century, Western Europe started to be invaded by Germanic tribes from the north and the east, and some of the groups settled in Gaul. In the history of the French language, the most important groups are the Franks in northern France, the Alemanni in the modern German/French border area (Alsace), the Burgundians in the Rhône (and the Saone) Valley and the Visigoths in the Aquitaine region and Spain. The Frankish language had a profound influence on the Latin spoken in their respective regions by altering both the pronunciation (especially the vowel system phonemes: e, eu, u, short o) and the syntax. It also introduced a number of new words (see List of French words of Germanic origin). Sources disagree on how much of the vocabulary of modern French (excluding French dialects) comes from Germanic words and range from just 500 words (≈1%)[16] (representing loans from ancient Germanic languages: Gothic and Frankish)[17] to 15% of the modern vocabulary (representing all Germanic loans up to modern times: Gothic, Frankish, Old Norse/Scandinavian, Dutch, German and English)[18] to even higher if Germanic words coming from Latin and other Romance languages are taken into account. (Note that according to the Académie française, only 5% of French words come from English.)

Changes in lexicon/morphology/syntax:

  • The name of the language itself, français, comes from Old French franceis/francesc (compare Medieval Latin franciscus) from the Germanic frankisc "french, frankish" from Frank ('freeman'). The Franks referred to their land as Franko(n), which became Francia in Latin in the 3rd century (then an area in Gallia Belgica, somewhere in modern-day Belgium or the Netherlands). The name Gaule ("Gaul") was also taken from the Frankish *Walholant ("Land of the Romans/Gauls").
  • Several terms and expressions associated with their social structure (baron/baronne, bâtard, bru, chambellan, échevin, félon, féodal, forban, gars/garçon, leude, lige, maçon, maréchal, marquis, meurtrier, sénéchal).
  • Military terms (agrès/gréer, attaquer, bière ["stretcher"], dard, étendard, fief, flanc, flèche, gonfalon, guerre, garder, garnison, hangar, heaume, loge, marcher, patrouille, rang, rattraper, targe, trêve, troupe).
  • Colours derived from Frankish and other Germanic languages (blanc/blanche, bleu, blond/blonde, brun, fauve, gris, guède).
  • Other examples among common words are abandonner, arranger, attacher, auberge, bande, banquet, bâtir, besogne, bille, blesser, bois, bonnet, bord, bouquet, bouter, braise, broderie, brosse, chagrin, choix, chic, cliché, clinquant, coiffe, corroyer, crèche, danser, échaffaud, engage, effroi, épargner, épeler, étal, étayer, étiquette, fauteuil, flan, flatter, flotter, fourbir, frais, frapper, gai, galant, galoper, gant, gâteau, glisser, grappe, gratter, gredin, gripper, guère, guise, hache, haïr, halle, hanche, harasser, héron, heurter, jardin, jauger, joli, laid, lambeau, layette, lécher, lippe, liste, maint, maquignon, masque, massacrer, mauvais, mousse, mousseron, orgueil, parc, patois, pincer, pleige, rat, rater, regarder, remarquer, riche/richesse, rime, robe, rober, saisir, salon, savon, soupe, tampon, tomber, touaille, trépigner, trop, tuyau and many words starting with a hard g (like gagner, garantie, gauche, guérir) or with an aspired h (haine, hargneux, hâte, haut)[19]
  • Endings in -ard (from Frankish hard: canard, pochard, richard), -aud (from Frankish wald: crapaud, maraud, nigaud), -an/-and (from old suffix -anc, -enc: paysan, cormoran, Flamand, tisserand, chambellan) all very common family name affixes for French names.
  • Endings in -ange (Eng. -ing, Grm. -ung; boulange/boulanger, mélange/mélanger, vidange/vidanger), diminutive -on (oisillon)
  • Many verbs ending in -ir (2nd group, see French conjugation) such as affranchir, ahurir, choisir, guérir, haïr, honnir, jaillir, lotir, nantir, rafraîchir, ragaillardir, tarir, etc.
  • The prefix mé(s)- (from Frankish "missa-", as in mésentente, mégarde, méfait, mésaventure, mécréant, mépris, méconnaissance, méfiance, médisance)
  • The prefix for-, four- as in forbannir, forcené, forlonger, (se) fourvoyer, etc. from Frankish fir-, fur- (cf German ver-; English for-) merged with Old French fuers "outside, beyond" from Latin foris. Latin foris was not used as a prefix in Classical Latin, but appears as a prefix in Medieval Latin following the Germanic invasions.
  • The prefix en-, em- (which reinforced and merged with Latin in- "in, on, into") was extended to fit new formations not previously found in Latin. Influenced or calqued from Frankish *in- and *an-, usually with an intensive or perfective sense: emballer, emblaver, endosser, enhardir, enjoliver, enrichir, envelopper:
  • The syntax shows the systematic presence of a subject pronoun in front of the verb, as in the Germanic languages: je vois, tu vois, il voit. The subject pronoun is optional, function of the parameter pro-drop, in most other Romance languages (as in Spanish veo, ves, ve).
  • The inversion of subject-verb to verb-subject to form the interrogative is characteristic of the Germanic languages but is not found in any major Romance language, except Venetian and French (Vous avez un crayon. vs. Avez-vous un crayon?: "Do you have a pencil?").
  • The adjective placed in front of the noun is typical of Germanic languages. The word order is more frequent in French than in the other major Romance languages and is occasionally compulsory (belle femme, vieil homme, grande table, petite table). When it is optional, it can change the meaning: grand homme ("great man") and le plus grand homme ("the greatest man") vs. homme grand ("tall man") and l'homme le plus grand ("the tallest man"), certaine chose vs. chose certaine. In Walloon, the order "adjective + noun" is the general rule, as in Old French and North Cotentin Norman.
  • Several words are calqued or modelled on corresponding terms from Germanic languages (bienvenue, cauchemar, chagriner, compagnon, entreprendre, manoeuvre, manuscrit, on, pardonner, plupart, sainfoin, tocsin, toujours).

Frankish had a determining influence on the birth of Old French, which partly explains that Old French is the earliest-attested Romance language, such as in the Oaths of Strasbourg and Sequence of Saint Eulalia.[20] The new speech diverged so markedly from the Latin that it was no longer mutually intelligible. The Old Low Frankish influence is also primarily responsible for the differences between the langue d'oïl and langue d'oc (Occitan) since different parts of Northern France remained bilingual in Latin and Germanic for several centuries, which[21] correspond exactly to the places in which the first documents in Old French were written. Frankish shaped the popular Latin spoken there and gave it a very distinctive character compared to the other future Romance languages. The very first noticeable influence is the substitution of a Germanic stress accent for the Latin melodic accent,[22] which resulted in diphthongisation, distinction between long and short vowels and the loss of the unaccentuated syllable and of final vowels: Latin decima > F dîme (> E dime. Italian decima; Spanish diezmo); Vulgar Latin dignitate > OF deintié (> E dainty. Occitan dinhitat; Italian dignità; Spanish dignidad); VL catena > OF chaiene (> E chain. Occitan cadena; Italian catena; Spanish cadena). On the other hand, a common word like Latin aqua > Occitan aigue became Old French ewe > F eau 'water' (and évier sink) and was likely influenced by the OS or OHG word pronunciation aha (PG *ahwo).

In addition, two new phonemes that no longer existed in Vulgar Latin returned: [h] and [w] (> OF g(u)-, ONF w- cf. Picard w-), e.g. VL altu > OF halt 'high' (influenced by OLF *hauh; ≠ Italian, Spanish alto; Occitan naut); VL vespa > F guêpe (ONF wespe; Picard wespe) 'wasp' (influenced by OLF *waspa; ≠ Occitan vèspa; Italian vespa; Spanish avispa); L viscus > F gui 'mistletoe' (influenced by OLF *wihsila 'morello', together with analogous fruits, when they are not ripe; ≠ Occitan vesc; Italian vischio); LL vulpiculu 'little fox' (from L vulpes 'fox') > OF g[o]upil (influenced by OLF *wulf 'wolf'; ≠ Italian volpe). Italian and Spanish words of Germanic origin borrowed from French or directly from Germanic also retained [gw] and [g]: It, Sp. guerra 'war'. These examples show a clear result of bilingualism, which frequently altered the initial syllable of the Latin.

There is also the converse example in which the Latin word influenced the Germanic word: framboise 'raspberry' from OLF *brambasi (cf. OHG brāmberi > Brombeere 'mulberry'; E brambleberry; *basi 'berry' cf. Got. -basi, Dutch bes 'berry') conflated with LL fraga or OF fraie 'strawberry', which explains the shift to [f] from [b], and in turn the final -se of framboise turned fraie into fraise (≠ Occitan fragosta 'raspberry', Italian fragola 'strawberry'. Portuguese framboesa 'raspberry' and Spanish frambuesa are from French).[23]

Philologists such as Pope (1934) estimate that perhaps 15% of the vocabulary of Modern French still derives from Germanic sources, but the proportion was larger in Old French, as the language was re-Latinised and partly Italianised by clerics and grammarians in the Middle Ages and later. Nevertheless, many such words like haïr "to hate" (≠ Latin odiare > Italian odiare, Spanish odiar, Occitan asirar) and honte "shame" (≠ Latin vĕrēcundia > Occitan vergonha, Italian vergogna, Spanish vergüenza) remain common.

Urban T. Holmes Jr. estimated that German was spoken as a second language by public officials in western Austrasia and Neustria as late as the 850s and that it had completely disappeared as a spoken language from those regions only in the 10th century,[24] but some traces of Germanic elements still survive, especially in dialectal French (Poitevin, Norman, Burgundian, Walloon, Picard etc.).

Normans and terms from the Low Countries edit

In 1204 AD, the Duchy of Normandy was integrated into the Crown lands of France, and many words were introduced into French from Norman of which about 150 words of Scandinavian origin[25] are still in use. Most of the words are about the sea and seafaring: abraquer, alque, bagage, bitte, cingler, équiper (to equip), flotte, fringale, girouette, guichet, hauban, houle, hune, mare, marsouin, mouette, quille, raz, siller, touer, traquer, turbot, vague, varangue, varech. Others pertain to farming and daily life: accroupir, amadouer, bidon, bigot, brayer, brette, cottage, coterie, crochet, duvet, embraser, fi, flâner, guichet, haras, harfang, harnais, houspiller, marmonner, mièvre, nabot, nique, quenotte, raccrocher, ricaner, rincer, rogue.

Likewise, most words borrowed from Dutch deal with trade or are nautical in nature: affaler, amarrer, anspect, bar (sea-bass), bastringuer, bière (beer), blouse (bump), botte, bouée, bouffer, boulevard, bouquin, cague, cahute, caqueter, choquer, diguer, drôle, dune, équiper (to set sail), frelater, fret, grouiller, hareng, hère, lamaneur, lège, manne, mannequin, maquiller, matelot, méringue, moquer, plaque, sénau, tribord, vacarme, as are words from Low German: bivouac, bouder, homard, vogue, yole, and English of this period: arlequin (from Italian arlecchino < Norman hellequin < OE *Herla cyning), bateau, bébé, bol (sense 2 ≠ bol < Lt. bolus), bouline, bousin, cambuse, cliver, chiffe/chiffon, drague, drain, est, groom, héler, lac, merlin, mouette, nord, ouest, potasse, rade, rhum, sonde, sud, turf, yacht.

Langue d'oïl edit

 
The area of langues d'oïl

The medieval Italian poet Dante, in his Latin De vulgari eloquentia, classified the Romance languages into three groups by their respective words for "yes": Nam alii oc, alii si, alii vero dicunt oil, "For some say oc, others say si, others say oïl". The oïl languages – from Latin hoc ille, "that is it" – occupied northern France, the oc languages – from Latin hoc, "that" – southern France, and the si languages – from Latin sic, "thus" – the Italian and Iberian peninsulas. Modern linguists typically add a third group within France around Lyon, the "Arpitan" or "Franco-Provençal language", whose modern word for "yes" is ouè.

The Gallo-Romance group in the north of France, the langue d'oïl like Picard, Walloon and Francien, were influenced by the Germanic languages spoken by the Frankish invaders. From the time period of Clovis I, the Franks extended their rule over northern Gaul. Over time, the French language developed from either the Oïl language found around Paris and Île-de-France (the Francien theory) or from a standard administrative language based on common characteristics found in all Oïl languages (the lingua franca theory).

Langue d'oc used oc or òc for "yes" and is the language group in the south of France and northernmost Spain. The languages, such as Gascon and Provençal, have relatively little Frankish influence.

The Middle Ages also saw the influence of other linguistic groups on the dialects of France.

Modern French, which was derived mainly from the langue d'oïl, acquired the word si to contradict negative statements or respond to negative questions, from cognate forms of "yes" in Spanish and Catalan (), Portuguese (sim), and Italian ().

From the 4th to the 7th centuries, Brythonic-speaking peoples from Cornwall, Devon and Wales travelled across the English Channel for reasons of trade and of flight from the Anglo-Saxon invasions of England. They established themselves in Armorica, and their language became Breton in more recent centuries, which gave French bijou "jewel" (< Breton bizou from biz "finger") and menhir (< Breton maen "stone" and hir "long").

Attested since the time of Julius Caesar, a non-Celtic people who spoke a Basque-related language inhabited the Novempopulania (Aquitania Tertia) in southwestern France, but the language gradually lost ground to the expanding Romance during a period spanning most of the Early Middle Ages. Proto-Basque influenced the emerging Latin-based language spoken in the area between the Garonne and the Pyrenees, which eventually resulted in the dialect of Occitan called Gascon. Its influence is seen in words like boulbène and cargaison.

Vikings from Scandinavia invaded France from the 9th century onwards and established themselves mostly in what would be called Normandy. The Normans took up the langue d'oïl spoken there, but Norman French remained heavily influenced by Old Norse and its dialects. They also contributed many words to French related to sailing (mouette, crique, hauban, hune etc.) and farming.

After the 1066 Norman conquest of England, the Normans' language developed into Anglo-Norman, which served as the language of the ruling classes and commerce in England until the Hundred Years' War,[26] when the use of French-influenced English had spread throughout English society.

Around then, many words from Arabic (or from Persian via Arabic) entered French, mainly indirectly through Medieval Latin, Italian and Spanish. There are words for luxury goods (élixir, orange), spices (camphre, safran), trade goods (alcool, bougie, coton), sciences (alchimie, hasard), and mathematics (algèbre, algorithme). It was only after the 19th-century development of French colonies in North Africa that French borrowed words directly from Arabic (toubib, chouia, mechoui).

Modern French edit

For the period until around 1300, some linguists refer to the oïl languages collectively as Old French (ancien français). The earliest extant text in French is the Oaths of Strasbourg from 842; Old French became a literary language with the chansons de geste that told tales of the paladins of Charlemagne and the heroes of the Crusades.

The first notarized document in Modern French was redacted in Aosta in 1532, when in Paris Latin was still in use.[27] The first government authority to adopt Modern French as official was the Aosta Valley in 1536, three years before France itself.[28] By the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts in 1539 King Francis I made French the official language of administration and court proceedings in France, which ousted Latin, which had been used earlier. With the imposition of a standardised chancery dialect and the loss of the declension system, the dialect is referred to as Middle French (moyen français). The first grammatical description of French, the Tretté de la Grammaire française by Louis Maigret, was published in 1550. Many of the 700 words[29] of Modern French that originate from Italian were introduced in this period, including several denoting artistic concepts (scenario, piano), luxury items and food. The earliest history of the French language and its literature was also written in this period: the Recueil de l'origine de la langue et poesie françoise, by Claude Fauchet, published in 1581.

Following a period of unification, regulation and purification, the French of the 17th and the 18th centuries is sometimes referred to as Classical French (français classique)[citation needed], but many linguists simply refer to French language from the 17th century to today as Modern French (français moderne).

The foundation of the Académie française (French Academy) in 1634 by Cardinal Richelieu created an official body whose goal has been the purification and preservation of the French language. The group of 40 members is known as the Immortals, not, as some erroneously believe, because they are chosen to serve for the extent of their lives (which they are), but because of the inscription engraved on the official seal given to them by their founder Richelieu: "À l'immortalité" ("to [the] Immortality [of the French language]"). The foundation still exists and contributes to the policing of the language and to the adaptation of foreign words and expressions. Some recent modifications include the change from software to logiciel, packet-boat to paquebot, and riding-coat to redingote. The word ordinateur for computer, however was created not by the Académie but by a linguist appointed by IBM (see fr:ordinateur).

From the 17th to the 19th centuries, France was the leading land power in Europe; together with the influence of the Enlightenment, French was therefore the lingua franca of educated Europe, especially with regards to the arts, literature and diplomacy. Monarchs like Frederick II of Prussia and Catherine the Great of Russia spoke and wrote in excellent French. The Russian, German and Scandinavian courts spoke French as their main or official language and regarded their national languages as the language of the peasants. The spread of French to other European countries was also aided by emigration of persecuted Huguenots.[30]

In the 17th and the 18th centuries, French established itself permanently in the Americas. There is an academic debate about how fluent in French the colonists of New France were. Less than 15% of colonists (25% of the women – chiefly filles du roi – and 5% of the men) were from the Paris region and presumably spoke French, but most of the rest came from north-western and western regions of France in which French was not the usual first language. It is not clearly known how many among those colonists understood French as a second language, and how many among them, nearly all of whom natively spoke an oïl language, could understand and be understood by those who spoke French because of interlinguistic similarity. In any case, such a linguistic unification of all the groups coming from France happened (either in France, on the ships, or in Canada) that many sources noted that all "Canadiens" spoke French (King's French) natively by the end of the 17th century, well before the unification was complete in France. Today, French is the language of about 10 million people (not counting French-based creoles, which are also spoken by about 10 million people) in the Americas.

Through the Académie, public education, centuries of official control and the media, a unified official French language has been forged, but there remains a great deal of diversity today in terms of regional accents and words. For some critics, the "best" pronunciation of the French language is considered to be the one used in Touraine (around Tours and the Loire Valley), but such value judgments are fraught with problems, and with the ever-increasing loss of lifelong attachments to a specific region and the growing importance of the national media, the future of specific "regional" accents is often difficult to predict. The French nation-state, which appeared after the 1789 French Revolution and Napoleon I's empire, unified the French people in particular through the consolidation of the use of the French language. Hence, according to the historian Eric Hobsbawm, "the French language has been essential to the concept of 'France', although in 1789 50% of the French people did not speak it at all, and only 12 to 13% spoke it 'fairly' – in fact, even in oïl language zones, out of a central region, it was not usually spoken except in cities, and, even there, not always in the faubourgs [approximatively translatable to "suburbs"]. In the North as in the South of France, almost nobody spoke French."[31] Hobsbawm highlighted the role of conscription, invented by Napoleon, and of the 1880s public instruction laws, which allowed to mix the various groups of France into a nationalist mold, which created the French citizen and his consciousness of membership to a common nation, and the various "patois" were progressively eradicated.

Issues edit

There is some debate in today's France about the preservation of the French language and the influence of English (see Franglais), especially with regard to international business, the sciences and popular culture. There have been laws (see Toubon law) enacted to require all print ads and billboards with foreign expressions to include a French translation and to require quotas of French-language songs (at least 40%) on the radio. There is also pressure, in differing degrees, from some regions as well as minority political or cultural groups for a measure of recognition and support for their regional languages.

Once the key international language in Europe, being the language of diplomacy from the 17th to the mid-20th centuries, French lost most of its international significance to English in the 20th century, especially after World War II, with the rise of the United States as a dominant global superpower. A watershed was the Treaty of Versailles, which ended World War I and was written in both French and English. A small but increasing number of large multinational firms headquartered in France use English as their working language even in their French operations. Also, to gain international recognition, French scientists often publish their work in English.

Those trends have met some resistance. In March 2006, President Jacques Chirac briefly walked out of an EU summit after Ernest-Antoine Seilliere began addressing the summit in English.[32] In February 2007, Forum Francophone International began organising protests against the "linguistic hegemony" of English in France and in support of the right of French workers to use French as their working language.[33]

French remains the second most-studied foreign language in the world, after English,[34] and is a lingua franca in some regions, notably in Africa. The legacy of French as a living language outside Europe is mixed: it is nearly extinct in some former French colonies (Southeast Asia), but the language has changed to creoles, dialects or pidgins in the French departments in the West Indies even though its people are educated in Standard French.[35] On the other hand, many former French colonies have adopted French as an official language, and the total number of French speakers has increased, especially in Africa.

In the Canadian province of Quebec, different laws have promoted the use of French in administration, business and education since the 1970s. Bill 101, for example, obliges most children whose parents did not attend an English-speaking school to be educated in French. Efforts are also made such as by the Office québécois de la langue française to reduce the variation of French spoken in Quebec and to preserve the distinctiveness of Quebec French.

There has been French emigration to the United States, Australia and South America, but the descendants of those immigrants have been so assimilated that few of them still speak French. In the United States, efforts are ongoing in Louisiana (see CODOFIL) and parts of New England (particularly Maine) to preserve French there.[36]

Internal phonological history edit

French has radically transformative sound changes, especially compared to other Romance languages such as Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian:

Latin Written French Spoken French Italian Catalan Spanish Portuguese Romanian
CANIS "dog" chien /ʃjɛ̃/ cane ca can cão câine
OCTŌ "eight" huit /ɥit/ otto vuit ocho oito opt
PIRUM "pear" poire /pwaʁ/ pera pera pera pera pară
ADIŪTĀRE "to help" aider /ɛde/ aiutare ajudar ayudar ajudar ajuta
IACET "it lies (e.g. on the ground)" gît /ʒi/ giace jeu yace jaz zace
Extensive reduction in French: sapv̄tvm > su /sy/ "known"
Language Change Form Pronun.
Classical Latin sapv̄tvm /saˈpuːtũː/
Vulgar Latin[37] Vowel length is replaced
by vowel quality
sapv̄tvm /saˈputũ/
Western Romance[38][39] vowel changes,
first lenition
sabudo /saˈbudo/
Gallo-Romance[40][41][42] loss of final vowels sabud /saˈbud/
second lenition savuḍ /saˈvuð/
final devoicing savuṭ /saˈvuθ/
loss of /v/ near
rounded vowel
seüṭ /səˈuθ/
Old French fronting of /u/ seüṭ /səˈyθ/
loss of dental fricatives seü /səˈy/
French collapse of hiatus su /sy/
Extensive reduction in French: vītam > vie /vi/ "life"
Language Change Form Pronun.
Classical Latin vītam /ˈwiːtãː/
Vulgar Latin Vowel length is replaced
by vowel quality
vītam /ˈβitã/
Western Romance vowel changes,
first lenition
vida /ˈvida/
Old French second lenition,
final /a/ lenition to /ə/
viḍe /ˈviðə/
loss of dental fricatives vie /ˈviə/
French loss of final schwa vie /vi/

Vowels edit

The Vulgar Latin[a] underlying French and most other Romance languages had seven vowels in stressed syllables (/a ɛ e i ɔ o u/, which are similar to the vowels of American English pat/pot pet pate peat caught coat coot respectively), and five in unstressed syllables (/a e i o u/). Portuguese and Italian largely preserve that system, and Spanish has innovated only in converting /ɛ/ to /je/ and /ɔ/ to /we/, which resulted in a simple five-vowel system /a e i o u/. In French, however, numerous sound changes resulted in a system with 12–14 oral vowels and 3–4 nasal vowels (see French phonology).

Perhaps the most salient characteristic of French vowel history is the development of a strong stress accent, which is usually ascribed to the influence of the Germanic languages. It has led to the disappearance of most unstressed vowels and to pervasive differences in the pronunciation of stressed vowels in syllables that were open or closed syllables (a closed syllable is here a syllable that was followed by two or more consonants in Vulgar Latin, and an open syllable was followed by at most one consonant). It is commonly thought that stressed vowels in open syllables were lengthened, and most of the long vowels were then turned into diphthongs. The loss of unstressed vowels, particularly those after the stressed syllable, ultimately produced the situation in Modern French in which the accent is uniformly found on the last syllable of a word. (Conversely, Modern French has a stress accent that is quite weak, with little difference between the pronunciation of stressed and unstressed vowels.)

Unstressed vowels edit

Vulgar Latin had five vowels in unstressed syllables: /a e i o u/. When they occurred word-finally, all were lost in Old French except for /a/, which turned into a schwa (written e):

Latin Vulgar Latin French
FACTAM "done (fem.)" /fákta/ faite
NOCTEM "night" /nɔ́kte/ nuit
DĪXĪ "I said" /díksi/ dis
OCTŌ "eight" /ɔ́kto/ huit
FACTVM "done (masc.)" /fáktu/ fait

A final schwa also developed when the loss of a final vowel produced a consonant cluster that was then unpronounceable word-finally, usually consisting of a consonant followed by l, r, m or n (VL = Vulgar Latin, OF = Old French):

  • POPVLVM "people" > peuple
  • INTER "between" > VL */entre/ > entre
  • PATREM "father" > père[b]
  • ASINVM "donkey" > OF asne > âne
  • INSVLAM "island" > OF isle > île

The final schwa was eventually lost as well but has left its mark in the spelling and in the pronunciation of final consonants, which normally remain pronounced if a schwa followed but are often lost otherwise: fait "done (masc.)" /fɛ/ vs. faite "done (fem.)" /fɛt/.

Intertonic vowels (unstressed vowels in interior syllables) were lost entirely except for a in a syllable preceding the stress, which (originally) became a schwa. The stressed syllable is underlined in the Latin examples:

  • POPVLVM "people" > peuple
  • ASINVM "donkey, ass" > OF asne > âne
  • ANGELVM "angel" > ange
  • PRESBYTER "priest" > VL */prɛ́sbetre/ > OF prestre > prêtre
  • QVATTVORDECIM "fourteen" > VL */kwattɔ́rdetsi/ > quatorze
  • STEPHANVM "Stephen" > VL */estɛ́fanu/ > OF Estievne > Étienne
  • SEPTINAM "week" > VL */settemána/ > semaine
  • *PARABORE "to speak" > VL */parauláre/ > parler
  • SACRAMENTVM "sacrament" > OF sairement > serment "oath"[c]
  • ADIV̄RE "to help" > aider
  • DISIĒIV̄RE "to break one's fast" > OF disner > dîner "to dine"

Stressed vowels edit

As noted above, stressed vowels developed quite differently depending on whether they occurred in an open syllable (followed by at most one consonant) or a closed syllable (followed by two or more consonants). In open syllables, the Vulgar Latin mid vowels e ɔ o/ all diphthongized, becoming Old French ie oi ue eu respectively (ue and eu later merged), while Vulgar Latin /a/ was raised to Old French e. In closed syllables, all Vulgar Latin vowels originally remained unchanged, but eventually, /e/ merged into /ɛ/, /u/ became the front rounded vowel /y/ and /o/ was raised to /u/. (The last two changes occurred unconditionally, in both open and closed and in both stressed and unstressed syllables.)

This table shows the outcome of stressed vowels in open syllables:

Vulgar Latin Old French Modern French spelling Modern French pronunciation Examples
/a/ e e, è /e/, /ɛ/ MARE "sea" > mer, TALEM "such" > tel, NĀSVM "nose" > nez, NATVM "born" >
/ɛ/ ie ie /je/, /jɛ/ HERI "yesterday" > hier, *MELEM "honey" > miel, PEDEM "foot" > pied
/e/ oi oi /wa/ PĒRA pear > poire, PILVM "hair" > poil, VIAM "way" > voie
/i/ i i /i/ FĪLVM "wire" > fil, VĪTA "life" > vie
/ɔ/ ue eu, œu /ø/, /œ/ *COREM "heart" > OF cuer > cœur, NOVVM "new" > OF nuef > neuf
/o/ eu eu, œu /ø/, /œ/ HŌRA "hour" > heure, GVLA "throat" > gueule
/u/ u u /y/ DV̄RVM "hard" > dur

This table shows the outcome of stressed vowels in closed syllables:

Vulgar Latin Old French Modern French spelling Modern French pronunciation Examples
/a/ a a /a/ PARTEM "part" > part, CARRVM "carriage" > char, VACCAM "cow" > vache
/ɛ/ e e /ɛ/ TERRAM "land" > terre, SEPTEM "seven" > VL /sɛtte/ > OF set > sept /sɛt/[d]
/e/ e e /ɛ/ SICCVM dry > sec
/i/ i i /i/ VĪLLAM "estate" > ville "town"
/ɔ/ o o /ɔ/, /o/ PORTUM "port" > port, SOTTVM "foolish" > sot
/o/ o ou /u/ CVRTVM "short" > court, GVTTAM "drop (of liquid)" > OF gote > goutte[43]
/u/ u u /y/ NV̄LLVM "none" > nul

Nasal vowels edit

Latin N that ended up not followed by a vowel after the loss of vowels in unstressed syllables was ultimately absorbed into the preceding vowel, which produced a series of nasal vowels. The developments are somewhat complex (even more so when a palatal element is also present in the same cluster, as in PUNCTUM "point, dot" > point /pwɛ̃/). There are two separate cases, depending on whether the N originally stood between vowels or next to a consonant (whether a preceding stressed vowel developed in an open syllable or closed syllable context, respectively). See the article on the phonological history of French for full details.

Long vowels edit

Latin S before a consonant ultimately was absorbed into the preceding vowel, which produced a long vowel (indicated in Modern French spelling with a circumflex accent). For the most part, the long vowels are no longer pronounced distinctively long in Modern French (although long ê is still distinguished in Quebec French). In most cases, the formerly-long vowel is pronounced identically to the formerly short vowel (mur "wall" and mûr "mature" are pronounced the same), but some pairs are distinguished by their quality (o /ɔ/ vs. ô /o/).

A separate later vowel lengthening operates allophonically in Modern French and lengthens vowels before the final voiced fricatives /v z ʒ ʁ vʁ/ (e.g. paix /pɛ/ "peace" vs. pair [pɛːʁ] "even").

Effect of palatalised consonants edit

Late Vulgar Latin of the French area had a full complement of palatalised consonants, and more developed over time. Most of them, if preceded by a vowel, caused a /j/ sound (a palatal approximant, as in the English words you or yard) to appear before them, which combined with the vowel to produce a diphthong and eventually developed in various complex ways. A /j/ also appeared after them if they were originally followed by certain stressed vowels in open syllables (specifically, /a/ or /e/). If the appearance of the /j/ sound produced a triphthong, the middle vowel was dropped.

Examples show the various sources of palatalized consonants:

  1. From Latin E or I in hiatus:
    • BASSIĀRE "to lower" > VL */bassʲare/ > OF baissier > baisser[e]
    • PALĀTIUM "palace" > VL */palatsʲu/ > palais
  2. From Latin C or G followed by a front vowel (i.e. E or I):
    • PĀCEM "peace" > VL */patsʲe/ > paix
    • CĒRA "wax" > VL */tsʲera/ > */tsjejra/ > cire[f]
  3. From Latin sequences such as CT, X, GR:
    • FACTVM "done" > Western Vulgar Latin */fajtʲu/ > fait
    • LAXĀRE "to release" > Western Vulgar Latin */lajsʲare/ > OF laissier > laisser "to let"[g]
    • NIGRVM "black" > Western Vulgar Latin */nejrʲu/ > Early Old French neir > noir[h]
    • NOCTEM "night" > Western Vulgar Latin */nɔjtʲe/ > */nwɔjtʲe/ > */nujtʲe/ nuit[i]
  4. From Latin C or G followed by /a/ except after a vowel:
    • CANEM "dog" > pre-French */tʃʲane/ > chien
    • CARRICĀRE "to load" > Western Vulgar Latin */karregare/ > */kargare/ > pre-French */tʃʲardʒʲare/ > OF chargier
  5. From Latin consonantal I:
    • PĒIOR /pejjor/ "worse" > Western Vulgar Latin */pɛjrʲe/ > pre-French */pjɛjrʲe > pire[j]
    • IACET "he lies (on the ground)" > pre-French */dʒʲatsʲet/ > */dʒjajtst/ > OF gist > gît[k]

Effect of l edit

In Old French, l before a consonant became u and produced new diphthongs, which eventually resolved into monophthongs: FALSAM "false" > fausse /fos/. See the article on the phonological history of French for details.

Consonants edit

The sound changes involving consonants are less striking than those involving vowels. In some ways, French is actually relatively conservative. For example, it preserves initial pl-, fl-, cl-, unlike Spanish, Portuguese and Italian: PLOVĒRE "to rain" > pleuvoir (Spanish llover, Portuguese chover, Italian piovere).

Lenition edit

Consonants between vowels were subject to a process called lenition, a type of weakening. That was more extensive in French than in Spanish, Portuguese or Italian. For example, /t/ between vowels went through the following stages in French: /t/ > /d/ > /ð/ > no sound. However, in Spanish only the first two changes happened; in Brazilian Portuguese, only the first change happened, and in Italian, no change happened. Compare VĪTAM "life" > vie with Italian vita, Portuguese vida, Spanish vida [biða]. This table shows the outcomes:

Vulgar Latin French Examples
/t/, /d/ no sound VĪTAM "life" > vie; CADĒRE "to fall" > OF cheoir > choir
/k/, /g/ /j/ or no sound PACĀRE "to pay" > payer; LOCĀRE "to put, to lease" > louer "to rent"
/p/, /b/, /f/, /v/ /v/ or no sound *SAPĒRE "to be wise" > savoir "to know"; DĒBĒRE "to have to" > devoir; *SAPV̄TVM "known" > OF seü > su
/s/ /z/ CAVSAM "cause" > chose "thing"
/tsʲ/ /z/ POTIŌNEM "drink" > VL */potsʲone/ > poison "poison"

Palatalization edit

As described above, Late Vulgar Latin of the French area had an extensive series of palatalized consonants that developed from numerous sources. The resulting sounds tended to drop a /j/ before and/or after them, which formed diphthongs that later developed in complex ways.

Latin E and I in hiatus position (directly followed by another vowel) developed into /j/ in Vulgar Latin and then combined with the preceding consonant to form a palatalized consonant. All consonants could be palatalized in that fashion. The resulting consonants developed as follows (some developed differently when they became final as a result of the early loss of the following vowel):

Vulgar Latin French, non-final French, final Examples
*/tj/ > */tsʲ/ (i)s POTIŌNEM "drink" > poison "poison"; PALĀTIVM "palace" > palais
*/kj/, */ttj/, */kkj/, */ktj/ > */ttsʲ/ c, ss OF z > s *FACIAM "face" > face; BRACCHIVM "arm" > OF braz > bras, *PETTIAM "piece" > pièce, *DĪRECTIĀRE "to set, to erect" > OF drecier > dresser[l]
*/dj/, */gj/ > */jj/ i *GAVDIAM "joy" > joie; MEDIVM "middle" > mi; EXAGIUM "balance" > essai
*/sʲ/ (i)s BASIĀRE "to kiss" > baiser
*/ssʲ/ (i)ss (i)s BASSIĀRE "to lower" > baisser
*/lʲ/ ill il PALEAM "straw" > paille; *TRIPĀLIVM "instrument of torture" > travail "work"[m]
*/nʲ/ gn (i)n *MONTĀNEAM "mountainous" > montagne "mountain"; BALNEVM "bath" > VL */banju/ > bain[n]
*/rʲ/ (i)r or (ie)r[o] ĀREAM "threshing floor, open space" > aire; OPERĀRIVM "worker" > ouvrier
*/mʲ/, */mnʲ/[p] ng /◌̃ʒ/ ? VĪNDĒMIA "vintage" > OF vendenge > vendange; SOMNIĀRE "to dream" > OF songier > songer
*/pʲ/ ch /ʃ/ ? SAPIAM "I may be wise" > (je) sache "I may know"
*/bʲ/, */vʲ/, */fʲ/ g /ʒ/ *RABIAM "rage" > rage; RVBEVM "red" > rouge

C followed by E or I developed into Vulgar Latin */tsʲ/, which was lenited to */dzʲ/ between vowels (later -is-). The pronunciation /ts/ was still present in Old French but was later simplified to /s/:

  • CENTVM "hundred" > cent
  • PLACĒRE "to please" > plaisir "pleasure"
  • PĀCEM "peace" > OF pais > paix

G before E or I developed originally into Vulgar Latin */j/, which subsequently became /dʒʲ/ when it was not between vowels. The pronunciation /dʒ/ was still present in Old French but was later simplified to /ʒ/. Between vowels, /j/ often disappeared:

  • GENTĒS "people" > gents > gents
  • RĒGĪNA "queen" > OF reïne > reine
  • QUADRĀGINTĀ "forty" > quarante
  • LEGERE "to read" > pre-French */ljɛjrʲe/ > lire[q]

C and G before A except after a vowel developed into /tʃʲ/ and /dʒʲ/, respectively. Both /tʃ/ and /dʒ/ persisted the Old French but were later subsequently simplified to /ʃ/ and /ʒ/:

  • CARRVM "chariot" > char
  • GAMBAM "leg" > jambe
  • MANICAM "sleeve" > */manka/ > manche
  • SICCAM "dry (fem.)" > sèche

In various consonant combinations involving C or G + another consonant, the C or G developed into /j/, which proceeded to palatalize the following consonant:

  • FACTVM "done" > fait
  • LAXĀRE "to release" > OF laissier "to let" > laisser
  • VETVLAM "old" > VECLAM > OF vieille
  • ARTICVLVM "joint" > VL */arteklu/ > orteil "toe"
  • VIGILĀRE "to keep watch" > OF veillier > veiller

In some cases, the loss of an intertonic vowel led to a similar sequence of /j/ or palatalized consonant + another consonant, which was palatalized in turn:

  • MEDIETĀTEM "half" > */mejjetate/ > */mejtʲat/ > moitié
  • CŌGITĀRE "to think" >> *CV̄GITĀRE > */kujetare/ > Western Vulgar Latin */kujedare/ > pre-French */kujdʲare/ > OF cuidier > cuider
  • *MĀNSIŌNĀTAM "household" > OF maisniée
  • *IMPĒIORĀRE "to worsen" > OF empoirier

Changes to final consonants edit

As a result of the pre-French loss of most final vowels, all consonants could appear word-finally except /tʃ/ and /dʒ/, which were always followed by at least a schwa, stemming from either a final /a/ or a prop vowel. In Old French, however, all underlying voiced stops and fricatives were pronounced voiceless word-finally. That was clearly reflected in Old French spelling: the adjectives froit "cold" (feminine froide), vif "lively" (feminine vive), larc "large" (feminine large) and the verbs, je doif "I must" vs. ils doivent "they must", je lef "I may wash" vs. ils levent "they (may) wash". Most of the alternations have since disappeared (partly because of morphological reshaping and partly because of respelling once most final consonants had been lost, as described below), but the adjectival alternation vif vs. vive (and similarly for other adjectives in -f) has remained.

In the Middle French, most final consonants became gradually lost. That proceeded in stages:

  1. The loss of final consonants when appearing before another word beginning with a consonant. This stage is preserved in the words six and dix, which are pronounced /sis/ /dis/ standing alone but /si/ /di/ before a word beginning with a consonant and /siz/ /diz/ before a word beginning with a vowel. If the word ended in a stressed vowel followed by /s/ (as, for example, in plurals), the same process apparently operated as elsewhere when an /s/ preceded a consonant, with a long vowel resulting. (This situation is still found, for example, in Jèrriais, a dialect of the Norman language, which preserves long vowels and has words ending in a vowel lengthening that vowel in the plural.)
  2. Loss of final consonants before a pause. That left a two-way pronunciation for most words, with final consonants pronounced before a following vowel-initial word but not elsewhere, and is the origin of the modern phenomenon of liaison.
  3. Loss of final consonants in all circumstances. The process is still ongoing, which causes a gradual loss of liaison, especially in informal speech, except in certain limited contexts and fixed expressions.

The final consonants that are normally subject to loss are /t/, /s/, /p/, sometimes /k/ and /r/, rarely /f/ (in clé < the earlier and still occasional clef). The consonants /l/ and /ʎ/ were normally preserved, but /m/, /n/, /ɲ/ and /ʃ/ did not occur (the voiced obstruents /d z b g v ʒ/ also did not occur). A more recent countervailing tendency, however, is the restoration of some formerly-lost final consonants, as in sens, now pronounced /sɑ̃s/ but formerly /sɑ̃/, as still found in the expressions sens dessus dessous "upside down" and sens devant derrière "back to front". The restored consonant may stem from the liaison pronunciation or the spelling, and it serves to reduce ambiguity. For example, /sɑ̃/ is also the pronunciation of cent "hundred", sang "blood" and sans "without" (among others).

Effect of substrate and superstrate languages edit

French is noticeably different from most other Romance languages. Some of the changes have been attributed to substrate influence, which is from Gaulish (Celtic), or superstrate influence, which is from Frankish (Germanic). In practice, it is difficult to say with confidence which sound and grammar changes were caused by substrate and superstrate influences, since many of the changes in French have parallels in other Romance languages or are changes that are undergone by many languages in their process of development. However, the following are likely candidates.

In phonology:

  • The reintroduction of the consonant /h/ at the beginning of a word is caused by Frankish influence and occurs mostly in words borrowed from Germanic. The sound no longer exists in Standard Modern French (it survives dialectally, particularly in the regions of Normandy, Picardy, Wallonia and Louisiana), but a Germanic h usually disallows liaison: les halles /le.al/, les haies /le.ɛ/, les haltes /le.alt/, but a Latin h allows liaison: les herbes /lezɛrb/, les hôtels /lezotɛl/.
  • The reintroduction of /w/ in Northern Norman, Picard, Walloon, Champenois, Bourguignon and Bas-Lorrain[44] is caused by Germanic influence. All Romance languages have borrowed Germanic words containing /w/, but all languages south of the isogloss, including the ancestor of Modern French ("Central French"), converted it to /ɡw/, which usually developed subsequently into /ɡ/. English has borrowed words from Norman French (1066 – c. 1200 AD) and Standard French (c. 1200–1400 AD), which sometimes results in doublets like warranty and guarantee or warden and guardian.
  • The occurrence of an extremely-strong stress accent led to the loss of unstressed vowels and the extensive modification of stressed vowels (diphthongization), which is likely caused by Frankish influence and possibly Celtic influence since both languages had a strong initial stress (tela -> TEla -> toile)[45] This feature also no longer exists in Modern French, but its influence remains in the uniform final word stress in Modern French since the strong stress caused all vowels after it to be ultimately lost.
  • Nasalization resulting from compensatory vowel lengthening in stressed syllables was caused by Germanic and/or Celtic stress accent. Among Romance languages, it occurs primarily in French, Occitan, Arpitan and Portuguese, all of which have possible Celtic substratums. However, scattered dialects of Romance languages, including Sardinian, Spanish and Lombard, also have the phenomenon as an allophonic (though not phonemic) property. Among the four Romance languages in which it is prominent beyond divergent dialects, the only one for which it is undebatably phonemic is French[46]
  • The development of front-rounded vowels /y/, /ø/, and /œ/ may be caused by Germanic influence, as few Romance languages other than French have such vowels, but Gallo-Romance languages have them and share a Germanic influence. At least one sound, /y/, still exists in Celtic languages. A number of other scholars, most famously including Romance linguist Ascoli, have attributed the French sound to the Celtic substratum.[47] The attribution of the sounds to Celtic influence actually predates the emergence of academic linguistics as early as the 1500s, when it was attested as being called "Gaulish u". Among Romance languages, its distribution strongly correspondent with areas of suspected Celtic substratum: French, Arpitan, Occitan, Romansch and Gallo-Italic dialects, along with some dialects of Portuguese. The change may have occurred around the same time as a similar fronting of long [u] to [y] in the British Celtic languages. On the other hand, scholars such as Posner and Meyer-Lübke acknowledge the possibility of Celtic influence but see the development as internally motivated.[48][49]
  • The lenition of intervocalic consonants (see above) may be caused by Celtic influence. A similar change happened in Celtic languages about the same time, and the demarcation between Romance dialects with and without this change (the La Spezia–Rimini Line) corresponds closely to the limit of Celtic settlement in ancient Rome. The lenition also affected words that were borrowed from Germanic (haïr < hadir < *hatjan; flan < *fladon; (cor)royer < *(ga)rēdan; etc.), which suggests that the tendency persisted for some time after it had been introduced.
  • The devoicing of word-final voiced consonants in Old French was caused by Germanic influence (e.g. grant/grande, blont/blonde, bastart/bastarde).

In other areas:

  • Various words may have shifted gender under the influence from words of the same meaning or with a similar sound in Gaulish, as a result of the Celtic substrate. A connectionist model predicting shifts in gender assignment for common nouns more accurately predicted historical developments when the Gaulish genders of the same words were considered in the model. The loss of the neuter may have been accelerated in French also because Gaulish neuters were very hard to distinguish and were possibly lost earlier than Latin neuters.[50] In comparison, Romanian retains the neuter gender and Italian retains it for a couple of words. Portuguese, Sardinian, Catalan and Spanish also retain remnants of the neuter outside nouns in demonstrative pronouns and the like, but they have lost the neuter for nouns.
  • The development of verb-second syntax in Old French in which the verb must come in the second position in a sentence, regardless of whether the subject precedes or follows the verb, was probably caused by Germanic influence.
  • The first-person plural ending -ons (Old French -omes, -umes) is likely derived from the Frankish termination -ōmês, -umês (vs. Latin -āmus, -ēmus, -imus, and -īmus; cf. OHG -ōmēs, -umēs).[51]
  • The use of the letter k in Old French, which was replaced by c and qu during the Renaissance, was caused by Germanic influence. Typically, k was not used in Latin and other Romance languages. Similarly, the use of w and y also diminished.
  • The impersonal pronoun on "one, you, they" but more commonly replacing nous "we" (or "us") in colloquial French (first-person plural pronoun, see Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law), from Old French (h)om, a reduced form of homme "man", was a calque of the Germanic impersonal pronoun man "one, you, they" reduced form of mann "man" (cf Old English man "one, you, they", from mann "man"; German man "one, you, they" vs. Mann "man").
  • The expanded use of avoir "to have" over the more customary use of tenir "to have, hold" in other Romance languages was likely the influence from the Germanic word for "have", which has a similar form (cf. Frankish *habēn, Gothic haban, Old Norse hafa, English have).
  • The increased use of auxiliary verbal tenses, especially the passé composé, is probably caused by Germanic influence. Unknown in Classical Latin, the passé composé begins to appear in Old French in the early 13th century, after the Germanic and the Viking invasions. Its construction is identical to the one seen in all other Germanic languages at the time and earlier: "verb "be" (être) + past participle" when there is movement, indication of state or change of condition but ""have" (avoir) + past participle" for all other verbs. The passé composé is not universal to the Romance language family since only languages known to have Germanic superstrata display that type of construction, and they do so in varying degrees. The languages nearest to Germanic areas show constructions most similar to those seen in Germanic. Italian, Spanish and Catalan are other Romance languages with this type of compound verbal tense.
  • The heightened frequency of si ("so") in Old French correlates to Old High German so and thanne.
  • The tendency in Old French to use adverbs to complete the meaning of a verb, as in lever sur ("raise up"), monter en amont ("mount up"), aller avec ("go along/go with"), traire avant ("draw forward"), etc., is likely to be of Germanic origin.
  • The lack of a future tense in conditional clauses is likely caused by Germanic influence.
  • The reintroduction of a vigesimal system of counting by increments of 20 (soixante-dix "70" lit. "sixty-ten"; quatre-vingts "80" lit. "four-twenties"; quatre-vingt-dix "90" lit. "four-twenty-ten") is caused by North Germanic influence and first appeared in Normandy, in northern France. From there, it spread south after the formation of the French Republic and replaced the typical Romance forms, which are still used today in Belgian and Swiss French. The current vigesimal system was introduced by the Vikings and adopted by the Normans, who popularised its use (compare Danish tresindstyve, literally 3 times 20, or 60; English four score and seven for 87).[citation needed] Pre-Roman Celtic languages in Gaul also made use of a vigesimal system, but it largely vanished early in French linguistic history or became severely marginalised in its range. The Nordic vigesimal system may possibly derive ultimately from the Celtic. Old French also had treis vingts, cinq vingts (compare Welsh ugain "20", deugain "40", pedwar ugain "80", lit. "four-twenties").

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ For the purposes of this article, "Vulgar Latin" refers specifically to the spoken Latin that underlies French, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese, which is technically termed Proto-Italo-Western-Romance.
  2. ^ Note that a final schwa appears even though the t was eventually lost.
  3. ^ The word has been respelled in Modern French, but the Old French result shows that a in an intertonic syllable preceding the stress was originally preserved as a schwa.
  4. ^ The p is etymological only.
  5. ^ Here, /j/ appeared both before and after the palatalized sound, but Old French infinitives in -ier were later converted to end in -er.
  6. ^ Stressed /e/ in an open syllable normally developed to Early Old French ei and later oi. In this case, however, the /j/ produced by Vulgar Latin /tsʲ/ produced a triphthong /jej/, which was simplified to /i/ by dripping the middle vowel /e/.
  7. ^ See the note above about baisser.
  8. ^ The resulting sequence ei developed the same way as ei from the stressed open /e/.
  9. ^ VL /ɔ/ normally became diphthongal /wɔ/ in open syllables and later Old French ue. However, the diphthongization of /ɔ/ and /ɛ/ also occurred in closed syllables when a palatalized consonant followed, and the resulting triphthong was simplified by dropping the middle vowel.
  10. ^ The triphthong reduction here produced /i/ by deleting the middle vowel /ɛ/.
  11. ^ The triphthong resulted from the combined effects of the two palatalised consonants and was then reduced to /i/ by dropping the middle vowel /a/.
  12. ^ Note that no /j/ was dropped before the palatalized consonant in this case.
  13. ^ No /j/ was dropped before the palatalized consonant; the i in il(l) is purely a spelling construct, which probably stems from the consonant originally being pronounced geminated, as it still is in modern Italian.
  14. ^ No /j/ was dropped before the palatalized consonant except word-finally, which probably stems from the consonant originally being pronounced geminated, as it still is in modern Italian.
  15. ^ A /j/ was dropped before the consonant as expected except that VL */arʲ/ > ier.
  16. ^ VL MN simplified to m (in contrast to other Western Romance languages which generally merge it with the outcome of NN), so these two had the same outcome under palatalization.
  17. ^ See above.

References edit

  1. ^ Vincent Herschel Malmström, Geography of Europe: A Regional Analysis
  2. ^ Roger Collins, The Basques, Blackwell, 1990.
  3. ^ Barry Raftery & Jane McIntosh, Atlas of the Celts, Firefly Books, 2001
  4. ^ Laurence Hélix (24 August 2023). Histoire de la langue française. Ellipses Edition Marketing S.A. p. 7. ISBN 978-2-7298-6470-5. Le déclin du Gaulois et sa disparition ne s'expliquent pas seulement par des pratiques culturelles spécifiques: Lorsque les Romains conduits par César envahirent la Gaule, au 1er siecle avant J.-C., celle-ci romanisa de manière progressive et profonde. Pendant près de 500 ans, la fameuse période gallo-romaine, le gaulois et le latin parlé coexistèrent; au VIe siècle encore; le temoignage de Grégoire de Tours atteste la survivance de la langue gauloise.
  5. ^ Hist. Franc., book I, 32 Veniens vero Arvernos, delubrum illud, quod Gallica lingua Vasso Galatæ vocant, incendit, diruit, atque subvertit. Coming to Clermont [to the Arverni] he set on fire, overthrew and destroyed that shrine which they call Vasso Galatæ in the Gallic tongue.
  6. ^ R. Anthony Lodge, French: From Dialect to Standard (Routledge, 1993).
  7. ^ Giovanni Battista Pellegrini, "Substrata", in Romance Comparative and Historical Linguistics, ed. Rebecca Posner et al. (The Hague: Mouton de Gruyter, 1980), 65.
  8. ^ Henri Guiter, "Sur le substrat gaulois dans la Romania", in Munus amicitae. Studia linguistica in honorem Witoldi Manczak septuagenarii, eds., Anna Bochnakowa & Stanislan Widlak, Krakow, 1995.
  9. ^ Eugeen Roegiest, Vers les sources des langues romanes: Un itinéraire linguistique à travers la Romania (Leuven, Belgium: Acco, 2006), 83.
  10. ^ Jean-Paul Savignac, Dictionnaire français-gaulois, s.v. "trop, très" (Paris: La Différence, 2004), 294–5.
  11. ^ Pierre-Yves Lambert, La Langue gauloise (Paris: France, 1994), 46–7. ISBN 978-2-87772-224-7
  12. ^ Lambert 46–47
  13. ^ "Mots francais d'origine gauloise". Mots d'origine gauloise. Retrieved 22 October 2006.
  14. ^ Calvert Watkins, "Italo-Celtic revisited", in H. Birnbaum, J. Puhvel, ed, Ancient Indo-European Dialects, Berkeley-Los Angeles 1966, p. 29-50.
  15. ^ Lambert 158.
  16. ^ Henriette Walter, Gérard Walter, Dictionnaire des mots d’origine étrangère, Paris, 1998
  17. ^ . Catholic Central French. Archived from the original on 16 August 2006. Retrieved 22 March 2006.
  18. ^ Walter & Walter 1998.
  19. ^ Le trésor de la langue française informatisé
  20. ^ Bernard Cerquiglini, La naissance du français, Presses Universitaires de France, 2nd Edition 1993, C. III, p. 53.
  21. ^ Cerquiglini 53
  22. ^ Cerquiglini 26.
  23. ^ Etymology of frambuesa (Spanish)
  24. ^ Urban T. Holmes Jr., A. H. Schutz (1938), A history of the French language, p. 29, Biblo & Tannen Publishers, ISBN 0-8196-0191-8
  25. ^ Elisabeth Ridel, Les Vikings et les mots, Editions Errance, 2010
  26. ^ Baugh, Cable, A History of the English Language, 104.
  27. ^ L'Europe aujourd'hui: textes des conférences et des entretiens, Éditions de la Baconnière, 1 janvier 1986, p.56.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 December 2013. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
  29. ^ Henriette Walter, L'aventure des mots français venus d'ailleurs, Robert Laffont, 1998.
  30. ^ Marc Fumaroli (2011). When The World Spoke French. Translated by Richard Howard. New York Review of Books. ISBN 978-1590173756.
  31. ^ Eric Hobsbawm, Nations and Nationalism since 1780 : programme, myth, reality (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1990; ISBN 0-521-43961-2) chapter II "The popular protonationalism", pp.80–81 French edition (Gallimard, 1992). According to Hobsbawm, the main source for this subject is Ferdinand Brunot (ed.), Histoire de la langue française, Paris, 1927–1943, 13 volumes, in particular volume IX. He also refers to Michel de Certeau, Dominique Julia, Judith Revel, Une politique de la langue: la Révolution française et les patois: l'enquête de l'abbé Grégoire, Paris, 1975. For the problem of the transformation of a minority official language into a widespread national language during and after the French Revolution, see Renée Balibar, L'Institution du français: essai sur le co-linguisme des Carolingiens à la République, Paris, 1985 (also Le co-linguisme, PUF, Que sais-je?, 1994, but out of print) ("The Institution of the French language: essay on colinguism from the Carolingian to the Republic. Finally, Hobsbawm refers to Renée Balibar and Dominique Laporte, Le Français national: politique et pratique de la langue nationale sous la Révolution, Paris, 1974.
  32. ^ Anonymous, "Chirac upset by English address," BBC News, 24 March 2006.
  33. ^ Anonymous, "French fury over English language," BBC News, 8 February 2007.
  34. ^ "DIFL". Learn Languages. Dante Institute of Foreign Languages. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  35. ^ "Sain Lucian Creole French". Ethnologue. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  36. ^ "Cultural Organisations". Maine Acadian Culture Preservation Commission. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  37. ^ (Herman 2000: 7)
  38. ^ Harris, Martin (1997). "The Romance Languages". In Harris, Martin; Vincent, Nigel (eds.). The Romance Languages. Taylor & Francis. pp. 1–25.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 December 2018. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  40. ^ « Moyen Âge : l'affirmation des langues vulgaires » in the Encyclopædia universalis.
  41. ^ Bernard Cerquiglini, La naissance du français, Paris, Presses universitaires de France, 1991, Que-sais-je ? ; éd. mise à jour, 2007.
  42. ^ Conference of Claude Hagège at the historical museum of Strasbourg, p. 5, (read online) 8 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  43. ^ The second t is etymological only.
  44. ^ Jacques Allières, La formation du Français, P. U. F.
  45. ^ Cerquiglini, Bernard. Une langue orpheline, Éd. de Minuit, 2007.
  46. ^ Rebecca Posner. The Romance Languages. pp. 24–29.
  47. ^ Craddock, Jerry Russell. Latin Legacy Versus Substratum Residue. p. 18.
  48. ^ Pope, M.K. From Latin to Modern French. p. 6.
  49. ^ Posner. Linguistic Change in French. 250–251
  50. ^ Maria Polinsky and Ezra Van Everbroeck (June 2003). "Develop of Gender Classifications: Modeling the Historical Change from Latin to French". Language. Vol. 79, no. 2. pp. 365–380.
  51. ^ Pope, From Latin to modern French, with especial consideration of Anglo-Norman, p. 16.

External links edit

  • Histoire de la langue française 6 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine (in French)
  • The Breton Wikipedia page on the French language gives examples from various stages in the development of French.

history, french, this, article, about, history, evolution, french, language, history, french, people, french, people, history, french, culture, culture, france, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, ad. This article is about the history and evolution of the French language For the history of the French people see French people For the history of the French culture see culture of France This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources History of French news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2008 Learn how and when to remove this message French is a Romance language meaning that it is descended primarily from Vulgar Latin that specifically is classified under the Gallo Romance languages The discussion of the history of a language is typically divided into external history describing the ethnic political social technological and other changes that affected the languages and internal history describing the phonological and grammatical changes undergone by the language itself Contents 1 External social and political history 1 1 Roman Gaul Gallia 1 2 Franks 1 3 Normans and terms from the Low Countries 1 4 Langue d oil 1 5 Modern French 1 5 1 Issues 2 Internal phonological history 2 1 Vowels 2 1 1 Unstressed vowels 2 1 2 Stressed vowels 2 1 3 Nasal vowels 2 1 4 Long vowels 2 1 5 Effect of palatalised consonants 2 1 6 Effect of l 2 2 Consonants 2 2 1 Lenition 2 2 2 Palatalization 2 2 3 Changes to final consonants 3 Effect of substrate and superstrate languages 4 See also 5 Explanatory notes 6 References 7 External linksExternal social and political history editRoman Gaul Gallia edit Before the Roman conquest of what is now France by Julius Caesar 58 52 BC much of present France was inhabited by Celtic speaking people referred to by the Romans as Gauls and Belgae Southern France was also home to a number of other remnant linguistic and ethnic groups including Iberians along the eastern part of the Pyrenees and western Mediterranean coast the remnant Ligures on the eastern Mediterranean coast and in the alpine areas Greek colonials in places such as Marseille and Antibes 1 and Vascones and Aquitani Proto Basques in much of the southwest 2 3 The Gaulish speaking population is held to have continued speaking Gaulish even as considerable Romanisation of the local material culture occurred with Gaulish and Latin coexisting for centuries under Roman rule and the last attestation of Gaulish to be deemed credible 4 having been written in the second half of the 6th century about the destruction of a pagan shrine in Auvergne 5 The Celtic population of Gaul had spoken Gaulish which is moderately well attested and appears to have wide dialectal variation including one distinctive variety Lepontic The French language evolved from Vulgar Latin a Latinised popular Italic dialect called sermo vulgaris but it was influenced by Gaulish 6 7 Examples include sandhi phenomena liaison resyllabification lenition the loss of unstressed syllables and the vowel system such as raising u o y u fronting stressed a e ɔ o or œ 8 9 Syntactic oddities attributable to Gaulish include the intensive prefix ro re cited in the Vienna glossary 5th century 10 cf luire to glimmer vs reluire to shine related to Irish ro and Welsh rhy very emphatic structures prepositional periphrastic phrases to render verbal aspect and the semantic development of oui yes aveugle blind Some sound changes are attested ps xs and pt xt appears in a pottery inscription from la Graufesenque 1st century in which the word paraxsidi is written for paropsides 11 Similarly the development cs xs is and ct xt it the latter being common to much of Western Romance languages also appears in inscriptions Divicta Divixta Rectugenus Rextugenus Reitugenus and is present in Welsh e g sextan saith seven extamos eithaf extreme For Romance compare Latin fraxinus ash tree OFr fraisne mod frene Occitan fraisse Catalan freixe Portuguese freixo Romansch fraissen vs Italian frassino Romanian frasin Spanish fresno Latin lactem milk French lait Welsh llaeth Portuguese leite Catalan llet Piemontese lait Liguro leite vs Italian latte Occitan lach Lombardo lacc Romansch latg Spanish leche Both changes sometimes had a cumulative effect in French Latin capsa kaxsa caisse vs Italian cassa Spanish caja or captivus kaxtivus Occitan caitiu OFr chaitif 12 mod chetif wretched feeble cf Welsh caeth bondman slave vs Italian cattivo Spanish cautivo In French and the adjoining folk dialects and closely related languages some 200 words of Gaulish origin have been retained most of which pertaining to folk life They include land features bief reach mill race combe hollow greve sandy shore lande heath plant names berle water parsnip bouleau birch bourdaine black alder chene oak corme service berry gerzeau corncockle if yew velar vellar hedge mustard wildlife alouette lark barge godwit loche loach pinson finch vandoise dace vanneau lapwing rural and farm life most notably boue mud cervoise ale charrue plow glaise loam gord kiddle stake net jachere fallow field javelle sheaf bundle fagot marne marl mouton sheep raie lynchet sillon furrow souche tree stump tree base tariere auger gimlet tonne barrel some common verbs braire to bray changer to change craindre to fear jaillir to surge gush 13 and loan translations aveugle blind from Latin ab oculis eyeless calque of Gaulish exsops blind literally eyeless 14 15 vs Latin caecus OFr cieu It cieco Sp ciego or orbus Occ orb Venetian orbo Romanian orb Other Celtic words were not borrowed directly but brought in through Latin some of which had become common in Latin braies knee length pants chainse tunic char dray wagon daim roe deer etain tin glaive broad sword manteau coat vassal serf knave Latin quickly took hold among the urban aristocracy for mercantile official and educational reasons but did not prevail in the countryside until some four or five centuries later since Latin was of little or no social value to the landed gentry and peasantry The eventual spread of Latin can be attributed to social factors in the Late Empire such as the movement from urban focused power to village centred economies and legal serfdom Franks edit See also Effect of substrate superstrate languages In the 3rd century Western Europe started to be invaded by Germanic tribes from the north and the east and some of the groups settled in Gaul In the history of the French language the most important groups are the Franks in northern France the Alemanni in the modern German French border area Alsace the Burgundians in the Rhone and the Saone Valley and the Visigoths in the Aquitaine region and Spain The Frankish language had a profound influence on the Latin spoken in their respective regions by altering both the pronunciation especially the vowel system phonemes e eu u short o and the syntax It also introduced a number of new words see List of French words of Germanic origin Sources disagree on how much of the vocabulary of modern French excluding French dialects comes from Germanic words and range from just 500 words 1 16 representing loans from ancient Germanic languages Gothic and Frankish 17 to 15 of the modern vocabulary representing all Germanic loans up to modern times Gothic Frankish Old Norse Scandinavian Dutch German and English 18 to even higher if Germanic words coming from Latin and other Romance languages are taken into account Note that according to the Academie francaise only 5 of French words come from English Changes in lexicon morphology syntax The name of the language itself francais comes from Old French franceis francesc compare Medieval Latin franciscus from the Germanic frankisc french frankish from Frank freeman The Franks referred to their land as Franko n which became Francia in Latin in the 3rd century then an area in Gallia Belgica somewhere in modern day Belgium or the Netherlands The name Gaule Gaul was also taken from the Frankish Walholant Land of the Romans Gauls Several terms and expressions associated with their social structure baron baronne batard bru chambellan echevin felon feodal forban gars garcon leude lige macon marechal marquis meurtrier senechal Military terms agres greer attaquer biere stretcher dard etendard fief flanc fleche gonfalon guerre garder garnison hangar heaume loge marcher patrouille rang rattraper targe treve troupe Colours derived from Frankish and other Germanic languages blanc blanche bleu blond blonde brun fauve gris guede Other examples among common words are abandonner arranger attacher auberge bande banquet batir besogne bille blesser bois bonnet bord bouquet bouter braise broderie brosse chagrin choix chic cliche clinquant coiffe corroyer creche danser echaffaud engage effroi epargner epeler etal etayer etiquette fauteuil flan flatter flotter fourbir frais frapper gai galant galoper gant gateau glisser grappe gratter gredin gripper guere guise hache hair halle hanche harasser heron heurter jardin jauger joli laid lambeau layette lecher lippe liste maint maquignon masque massacrer mauvais mousse mousseron orgueil parc patois pincer pleige rat rater regarder remarquer riche richesse rime robe rober saisir salon savon soupe tampon tomber touaille trepigner trop tuyau and many words starting with a hard g like gagner garantie gauche guerir or with an aspired h haine hargneux hate haut 19 Endings in ard from Frankish hard canard pochard richard aud from Frankish wald crapaud maraud nigaud an and from old suffix anc enc paysan cormoran Flamand tisserand chambellan all very common family name affixes for French names Endings in ange Eng ing Grm ung boulange boulanger melange melanger vidange vidanger diminutive on oisillon Many verbs ending in ir 2nd group see French conjugation such as affranchir ahurir choisir guerir hair honnir jaillir lotir nantir rafraichir ragaillardir tarir etc The prefix me s from Frankish missa as in mesentente megarde mefait mesaventure mecreant mepris meconnaissance mefiance medisance The prefix for four as in forbannir forcene forlonger se fourvoyer etc from Frankish fir fur cf German ver English for merged with Old French fuers outside beyond from Latin foris Latin foris was not used as a prefix in Classical Latin but appears as a prefix in Medieval Latin following the Germanic invasions The prefix en em which reinforced and merged with Latin in in on into was extended to fit new formations not previously found in Latin Influenced or calqued from Frankish in and an usually with an intensive or perfective sense emballer emblaver endosser enhardir enjoliver enrichir envelopper The syntax shows the systematic presence of a subject pronoun in front of the verb as in the Germanic languages je vois tu vois il voit The subject pronoun is optional function of the parameter pro drop in most other Romance languages as in Spanish veo ves ve The inversion of subject verb to verb subject to form the interrogative is characteristic of the Germanic languages but is not found in any major Romance language except Venetian and French Vous avez un crayon vs Avez vous un crayon Do you have a pencil The adjective placed in front of the noun is typical of Germanic languages The word order is more frequent in French than in the other major Romance languages and is occasionally compulsory belle femme vieil homme grande table petite table When it is optional it can change the meaning grand homme great man and le plus grand homme the greatest man vs homme grand tall man and l homme le plus grand the tallest man certaine chose vs chose certaine In Walloon the order adjective noun is the general rule as in Old French and North Cotentin Norman Several words are calqued or modelled on corresponding terms from Germanic languages bienvenue cauchemar chagriner compagnon entreprendre manoeuvre manuscrit on pardonner plupart sainfoin tocsin toujours Frankish had a determining influence on the birth of Old French which partly explains that Old French is the earliest attested Romance language such as in the Oaths of Strasbourg and Sequence of Saint Eulalia 20 The new speech diverged so markedly from the Latin that it was no longer mutually intelligible The Old Low Frankish influence is also primarily responsible for the differences between the langue d oil and langue d oc Occitan since different parts of Northern France remained bilingual in Latin and Germanic for several centuries which 21 correspond exactly to the places in which the first documents in Old French were written Frankish shaped the popular Latin spoken there and gave it a very distinctive character compared to the other future Romance languages The very first noticeable influence is the substitution of a Germanic stress accent for the Latin melodic accent 22 which resulted in diphthongisation distinction between long and short vowels and the loss of the unaccentuated syllable and of final vowels Latin decima gt F dime gt E dime Italian decima Spanish diezmo Vulgar Latin dignitate gt OF deintie gt E dainty Occitan dinhitat Italian dignita Spanish dignidad VL catena gt OF chaiene gt E chain Occitan cadena Italian catena Spanish cadena On the other hand a common word like Latin aqua gt Occitan aigue became Old French ewe gt F eau water and evier sink and was likely influenced by the OS or OHG word pronunciation aha PG ahwo In addition two new phonemes that no longer existed in Vulgar Latin returned h and w gt OF g u ONF w cf Picard w e g VL altu gt OF halt high influenced by OLF hauh Italian Spanish alto Occitan naut VL vespa gt F guepe ONF wespe Picard wespe wasp influenced by OLF waspa Occitan vespa Italian vespa Spanish avispa L viscus gt F gui mistletoe influenced by OLF wihsila morello together with analogous fruits when they are not ripe Occitan vesc Italian vischio LL vulpiculu little fox from L vulpes fox gt OF g o upil influenced by OLF wulf wolf Italian volpe Italian and Spanish words of Germanic origin borrowed from French or directly from Germanic also retained gw and g It Sp guerra war These examples show a clear result of bilingualism which frequently altered the initial syllable of the Latin There is also the converse example in which the Latin word influenced the Germanic word framboise raspberry from OLF brambasi cf OHG bramberi gt Brombeere mulberry E brambleberry basi berry cf Got basi Dutch bes berry conflated with LL fraga or OF fraie strawberry which explains the shift to f from b and in turn the final se of framboise turned fraie into fraise Occitan fragosta raspberry Italian fragola strawberry Portuguese framboesa raspberry and Spanish frambuesa are from French 23 Philologists such as Pope 1934 estimate that perhaps 15 of the vocabulary of Modern French still derives from Germanic sources but the proportion was larger in Old French as the language was re Latinised and partly Italianised by clerics and grammarians in the Middle Ages and later Nevertheless many such words like hair to hate Latin odiare gt Italian odiare Spanish odiar Occitan asirar and honte shame Latin vĕrecundia gt Occitan vergonha Italian vergogna Spanish verguenza remain common Urban T Holmes Jr estimated that German was spoken as a second language by public officials in western Austrasia and Neustria as late as the 850s and that it had completely disappeared as a spoken language from those regions only in the 10th century 24 but some traces of Germanic elements still survive especially in dialectal French Poitevin Norman Burgundian Walloon Picard etc Normans and terms from the Low Countries edit In 1204 AD the Duchy of Normandy was integrated into the Crown lands of France and many words were introduced into French from Norman of which about 150 words of Scandinavian origin 25 are still in use Most of the words are about the sea and seafaring abraquer alque bagage bitte cingler equiper to equip flotte fringale girouette guichet hauban houle hune mare marsouin mouette quille raz siller touer traquer turbot vague varangue varech Others pertain to farming and daily life accroupir amadouer bidon bigot brayer brette cottage coterie crochet duvet embraser fi flaner guichet haras harfang harnais houspiller marmonner mievre nabot nique quenotte raccrocher ricaner rincer rogue Likewise most words borrowed from Dutch deal with trade or are nautical in nature affaler amarrer anspect bar sea bass bastringuer biere beer blouse bump botte bouee bouffer boulevard bouquin cague cahute caqueter choquer diguer drole dune equiper to set sail frelater fret grouiller hareng here lamaneur lege manne mannequin maquiller matelot meringue moquer plaque senau tribord vacarme as are words from Low German bivouac bouder homard vogue yole and English of this period arlequin from Italian arlecchino lt Norman hellequin lt OE Herla cyning bateau bebe bol sense 2 bol lt Lt bolus bouline bousin cambuse cliver chiffe chiffon drague drain est groom heler lac merlin mouette nord ouest potasse rade rhum sonde sud turf yacht Langue d oil edit See also Old French nbsp The area of langues d oil The medieval Italian poet Dante in his Latin De vulgari eloquentia classified the Romance languages into three groups by their respective words for yes Nam alii oc alii si alii vero dicunt oil For some say oc others say si others say oil The oil languages from Latin hoc ille that is it occupied northern France the oc languages from Latin hoc that southern France and the si languages from Latin sic thus the Italian and Iberian peninsulas Modern linguists typically add a third group within France around Lyon the Arpitan or Franco Provencal language whose modern word for yes is oue The Gallo Romance group in the north of France the langue d oil like Picard Walloon and Francien were influenced by the Germanic languages spoken by the Frankish invaders From the time period of Clovis I the Franks extended their rule over northern Gaul Over time the French language developed from either the Oil language found around Paris and Ile de France the Francien theory or from a standard administrative language based on common characteristics found in all Oil languages the lingua franca theory Langue d oc used oc or oc for yes and is the language group in the south of France and northernmost Spain The languages such as Gascon and Provencal have relatively little Frankish influence The Middle Ages also saw the influence of other linguistic groups on the dialects of France Modern French which was derived mainly from the langue d oil acquired the word si to contradict negative statements or respond to negative questions from cognate forms of yes in Spanish and Catalan si Portuguese sim and Italian si From the 4th to the 7th centuries Brythonic speaking peoples from Cornwall Devon and Wales travelled across the English Channel for reasons of trade and of flight from the Anglo Saxon invasions of England They established themselves in Armorica and their language became Breton in more recent centuries which gave French bijou jewel lt Breton bizou from biz finger and menhir lt Breton maen stone and hir long Attested since the time of Julius Caesar a non Celtic people who spoke a Basque related language inhabited the Novempopulania Aquitania Tertia in southwestern France but the language gradually lost ground to the expanding Romance during a period spanning most of the Early Middle Ages Proto Basque influenced the emerging Latin based language spoken in the area between the Garonne and the Pyrenees which eventually resulted in the dialect of Occitan called Gascon Its influence is seen in words like boulbene and cargaison Vikings from Scandinavia invaded France from the 9th century onwards and established themselves mostly in what would be called Normandy The Normans took up the langue d oil spoken there but Norman French remained heavily influenced by Old Norse and its dialects They also contributed many words to French related to sailing mouette crique hauban hune etc and farming After the 1066 Norman conquest of England the Normans language developed into Anglo Norman which served as the language of the ruling classes and commerce in England until the Hundred Years War 26 when the use of French influenced English had spread throughout English society Around then many words from Arabic or from Persian via Arabic entered French mainly indirectly through Medieval Latin Italian and Spanish There are words for luxury goods elixir orange spices camphre safran trade goods alcool bougie coton sciences alchimie hasard and mathematics algebre algorithme It was only after the 19th century development of French colonies in North Africa that French borrowed words directly from Arabic toubib chouia mechoui Modern French edit See also Middle French For the period until around 1300 some linguists refer to the oil languages collectively as Old French ancien francais The earliest extant text in French is the Oaths of Strasbourg from 842 Old French became a literary language with the chansons de geste that told tales of the paladins of Charlemagne and the heroes of the Crusades The first notarized document in Modern French was redacted in Aosta in 1532 when in Paris Latin was still in use 27 The first government authority to adopt Modern French as official was the Aosta Valley in 1536 three years before France itself 28 By the Ordinance of Villers Cotterets in 1539 King Francis I made French the official language of administration and court proceedings in France which ousted Latin which had been used earlier With the imposition of a standardised chancery dialect and the loss of the declension system the dialect is referred to as Middle French moyen francais The first grammatical description of French the Trette de la Grammaire francaise by Louis Maigret was published in 1550 Many of the 700 words 29 of Modern French that originate from Italian were introduced in this period including several denoting artistic concepts scenario piano luxury items and food The earliest history of the French language and its literature was also written in this period the Recueil de l origine de la langue et poesie francoise by Claude Fauchet published in 1581 Following a period of unification regulation and purification the French of the 17th and the 18th centuries is sometimes referred to as Classical French francais classique citation needed but many linguists simply refer to French language from the 17th century to today as Modern French francais moderne The foundation of the Academie francaise French Academy in 1634 by Cardinal Richelieu created an official body whose goal has been the purification and preservation of the French language The group of 40 members is known as the Immortals not as some erroneously believe because they are chosen to serve for the extent of their lives which they are but because of the inscription engraved on the official seal given to them by their founder Richelieu A l immortalite to the Immortality of the French language The foundation still exists and contributes to the policing of the language and to the adaptation of foreign words and expressions Some recent modifications include the change from software to logiciel packet boat to paquebot and riding coat to redingote The word ordinateur for computer however was created not by the Academie but by a linguist appointed by IBM see fr ordinateur From the 17th to the 19th centuries France was the leading land power in Europe together with the influence of the Enlightenment French was therefore the lingua franca of educated Europe especially with regards to the arts literature and diplomacy Monarchs like Frederick II of Prussia and Catherine the Great of Russia spoke and wrote in excellent French The Russian German and Scandinavian courts spoke French as their main or official language and regarded their national languages as the language of the peasants The spread of French to other European countries was also aided by emigration of persecuted Huguenots 30 In the 17th and the 18th centuries French established itself permanently in the Americas There is an academic debate about how fluent in French the colonists of New France were Less than 15 of colonists 25 of the women chiefly filles du roi and 5 of the men were from the Paris region and presumably spoke French but most of the rest came from north western and western regions of France in which French was not the usual first language It is not clearly known how many among those colonists understood French as a second language and how many among them nearly all of whom natively spoke an oil language could understand and be understood by those who spoke French because of interlinguistic similarity In any case such a linguistic unification of all the groups coming from France happened either in France on the ships or in Canada that many sources noted that all Canadiens spoke French King s French natively by the end of the 17th century well before the unification was complete in France Today French is the language of about 10 million people not counting French based creoles which are also spoken by about 10 million people in the Americas Through the Academie public education centuries of official control and the media a unified official French language has been forged but there remains a great deal of diversity today in terms of regional accents and words For some critics the best pronunciation of the French language is considered to be the one used in Touraine around Tours and the Loire Valley but such value judgments are fraught with problems and with the ever increasing loss of lifelong attachments to a specific region and the growing importance of the national media the future of specific regional accents is often difficult to predict The French nation state which appeared after the 1789 French Revolution and Napoleon I s empire unified the French people in particular through the consolidation of the use of the French language Hence according to the historian Eric Hobsbawm the French language has been essential to the concept of France although in 1789 50 of the French people did not speak it at all and only 12 to 13 spoke it fairly in fact even in oil language zones out of a central region it was not usually spoken except in cities and even there not always in the faubourgs approximatively translatable to suburbs In the North as in the South of France almost nobody spoke French 31 Hobsbawm highlighted the role of conscription invented by Napoleon and of the 1880s public instruction laws which allowed to mix the various groups of France into a nationalist mold which created the French citizen and his consciousness of membership to a common nation and the various patois were progressively eradicated Issues edit There is some debate in today s France about the preservation of the French language and the influence of English see Franglais especially with regard to international business the sciences and popular culture There have been laws see Toubon law enacted to require all print ads and billboards with foreign expressions to include a French translation and to require quotas of French language songs at least 40 on the radio There is also pressure in differing degrees from some regions as well as minority political or cultural groups for a measure of recognition and support for their regional languages Once the key international language in Europe being the language of diplomacy from the 17th to the mid 20th centuries French lost most of its international significance to English in the 20th century especially after World War II with the rise of the United States as a dominant global superpower A watershed was the Treaty of Versailles which ended World War I and was written in both French and English A small but increasing number of large multinational firms headquartered in France use English as their working language even in their French operations Also to gain international recognition French scientists often publish their work in English Those trends have met some resistance In March 2006 President Jacques Chirac briefly walked out of an EU summit after Ernest Antoine Seilliere began addressing the summit in English 32 In February 2007 Forum Francophone International began organising protests against the linguistic hegemony of English in France and in support of the right of French workers to use French as their working language 33 French remains the second most studied foreign language in the world after English 34 and is a lingua franca in some regions notably in Africa The legacy of French as a living language outside Europe is mixed it is nearly extinct in some former French colonies Southeast Asia but the language has changed to creoles dialects or pidgins in the French departments in the West Indies even though its people are educated in Standard French 35 On the other hand many former French colonies have adopted French as an official language and the total number of French speakers has increased especially in Africa In the Canadian province of Quebec different laws have promoted the use of French in administration business and education since the 1970s Bill 101 for example obliges most children whose parents did not attend an English speaking school to be educated in French Efforts are also made such as by the Office quebecois de la langue francaise to reduce the variation of French spoken in Quebec and to preserve the distinctiveness of Quebec French There has been French emigration to the United States Australia and South America but the descendants of those immigrants have been so assimilated that few of them still speak French In the United States efforts are ongoing in Louisiana see CODOFIL and parts of New England particularly Maine to preserve French there 36 Internal phonological history editMain article Phonological history of French French has radically transformative sound changes especially compared to other Romance languages such as Spanish Portuguese Italian and Romanian Latin Written French Spoken French Italian Catalan Spanish Portuguese Romanian CANIS dog chien ʃjɛ cane ca can cao caine OCTŌ eight huit ɥit otto vuit ocho oito opt PIRUM pear poire pwaʁ pera pera pera pera pară ADIuTARE to help aider ɛde aiutare ajudar ayudar ajudar ajuta IACET it lies e g on the ground git ʒi giace jeu yace jaz zace Extensive reduction in French sapv tvm gt su sy known Language Change Form Pronun Classical Latin sapv tvm saˈpuːtũː Vulgar Latin 37 Vowel length is replacedby vowel quality sapv tvm saˈputũ Western Romance 38 39 vowel changes first lenition sabudo saˈbudo Gallo Romance 40 41 42 loss of final vowels sabud saˈbud second lenition savuḍ saˈvud final devoicing savuṭ saˈvu8 loss of v near rounded vowel seuṭ seˈu8 Old French fronting of u seuṭ seˈy8 loss of dental fricatives seu seˈy French collapse of hiatus su sy Extensive reduction in French vitam gt vie vi life Language Change Form Pronun Classical Latin vitam ˈwiːtaː Vulgar Latin Vowel length is replacedby vowel quality vitam ˈbita Western Romance vowel changes first lenition vida ˈvida Old French second lenition final a lenition to e viḍe ˈvide loss of dental fricatives vie ˈvie French loss of final schwa vie vi Vowels edit The Vulgar Latin a underlying French and most other Romance languages had seven vowels in stressed syllables a ɛ e i ɔ o u which are similar to the vowels of American English pat pot pet pate peat caught coat coot respectively and five in unstressed syllables a e i o u Portuguese and Italian largely preserve that system and Spanish has innovated only in converting ɛ to je and ɔ to we which resulted in a simple five vowel system a e i o u In French however numerous sound changes resulted in a system with 12 14 oral vowels and 3 4 nasal vowels see French phonology Perhaps the most salient characteristic of French vowel history is the development of a strong stress accent which is usually ascribed to the influence of the Germanic languages It has led to the disappearance of most unstressed vowels and to pervasive differences in the pronunciation of stressed vowels in syllables that were open or closed syllables a closed syllable is here a syllable that was followed by two or more consonants in Vulgar Latin and an open syllable was followed by at most one consonant It is commonly thought that stressed vowels in open syllables were lengthened and most of the long vowels were then turned into diphthongs The loss of unstressed vowels particularly those after the stressed syllable ultimately produced the situation in Modern French in which the accent is uniformly found on the last syllable of a word Conversely Modern French has a stress accent that is quite weak with little difference between the pronunciation of stressed and unstressed vowels Unstressed vowels edit Vulgar Latin had five vowels in unstressed syllables a e i o u When they occurred word finally all were lost in Old French except for a which turned into a schwa written e Latin Vulgar Latin French FACTAM done fem fakta faite NOCTEM night nɔ kte nuit DiXi I said diksi dis OCTŌ eight ɔ kto huit FACTVM done masc faktu fait A final schwa also developed when the loss of a final vowel produced a consonant cluster that was then unpronounceable word finally usually consisting of a consonant followed by l r m or n VL Vulgar Latin OF Old French POPVLVM people gt peuple INTER between gt VL entre gt entre PATREM father gt pere b ASINVM donkey gt OF asne gt ane INSVLAM island gt OF isle gt ile The final schwa was eventually lost as well but has left its mark in the spelling and in the pronunciation of final consonants which normally remain pronounced if a schwa followed but are often lost otherwise fait done masc fɛ vs faite done fem fɛt Intertonic vowels unstressed vowels in interior syllables were lost entirely except for a in a syllable preceding the stress which originally became a schwa The stressed syllable is underlined in the Latin examples POPVLVM people gt peuple ASINVM donkey ass gt OF asne gt ane ANGELVM angel gt ange PRESBYTER priest gt VL prɛ sbetre gt OF prestre gt pretre QVATTVORDECIM fourteen gt VL kwattɔ rdetsi gt quatorze STEPHANVM Stephen gt VL estɛ fanu gt OF Estievne gt Etienne SEPTIMANAM week gt VL settemana gt semaine PARABOLARE to speak gt VL paraulare gt parler SACRAMENTVM sacrament gt OF sairement gt serment oath c ADIV TARE to help gt aider DISIEIV NARE to break one s fast gt OF disner gt diner to dine Stressed vowels edit As noted above stressed vowels developed quite differently depending on whether they occurred in an open syllable followed by at most one consonant or a closed syllable followed by two or more consonants In open syllables the Vulgar Latin mid vowels ɛ e ɔ o all diphthongized becoming Old French ie oi ue eu respectively ue and eu later merged while Vulgar Latin a was raised to Old French e In closed syllables all Vulgar Latin vowels originally remained unchanged but eventually e merged into ɛ u became the front rounded vowel y and o was raised to u The last two changes occurred unconditionally in both open and closed and in both stressed and unstressed syllables This table shows the outcome of stressed vowels in open syllables Vulgar Latin Old French Modern French spelling Modern French pronunciation Examples a e e e e ɛ MARE sea gt mer TALEM such gt tel NASVM nose gt nez NATVM born gt ne ɛ ie ie je jɛ HERI yesterday gt hier MELEM honey gt miel PEDEM foot gt pied e oi oi wa PERA pear gt poire PILVM hair gt poil VIAM way gt voie i i i i FiLVM wire gt fil ViTA life gt vie ɔ ue eu œu o œ COREM heart gt OF cuer gt cœur NOVVM new gt OF nuef gt neuf o eu eu œu o œ HŌRA hour gt heure GVLA throat gt gueule u u u y DV RVM hard gt dur This table shows the outcome of stressed vowels in closed syllables Vulgar Latin Old French Modern French spelling Modern French pronunciation Examples a a a a PARTEM part gt part CARRVM carriage gt char VACCAM cow gt vache ɛ e e ɛ TERRAM land gt terre SEPTEM seven gt VL sɛtte gt OF set gt sept sɛt d e e e ɛ SICCVM dry gt sec i i i i ViLLAM estate gt ville town ɔ o o ɔ o PORTUM port gt port SOTTVM foolish gt sot o o ou u CVRTVM short gt court GVTTAM drop of liquid gt OF gote gt goutte 43 u u u y NV LLVM none gt nul Nasal vowels edit Latin N that ended up not followed by a vowel after the loss of vowels in unstressed syllables was ultimately absorbed into the preceding vowel which produced a series of nasal vowels The developments are somewhat complex even more so when a palatal element is also present in the same cluster as in PUNCTUM point dot gt point pwɛ There are two separate cases depending on whether the N originally stood between vowels or next to a consonant whether a preceding stressed vowel developed in an open syllable or closed syllable context respectively See the article on the phonological history of French for full details Long vowels edit Latin S before a consonant ultimately was absorbed into the preceding vowel which produced a long vowel indicated in Modern French spelling with a circumflex accent For the most part the long vowels are no longer pronounced distinctively long in Modern French although long e is still distinguished in Quebec French In most cases the formerly long vowel is pronounced identically to the formerly short vowel mur wall and mur mature are pronounced the same but some pairs are distinguished by their quality o ɔ vs o o A separate later vowel lengthening operates allophonically in Modern French and lengthens vowels before the final voiced fricatives v z ʒ ʁ vʁ e g paix pɛ peace vs pair pɛːʁ even Effect of palatalised consonants edit Late Vulgar Latin of the French area had a full complement of palatalised consonants and more developed over time Most of them if preceded by a vowel caused a j sound a palatal approximant as in the English words you or yard to appear before them which combined with the vowel to produce a diphthong and eventually developed in various complex ways A j also appeared after them if they were originally followed by certain stressed vowels in open syllables specifically a or e If the appearance of the j sound produced a triphthong the middle vowel was dropped Examples show the various sources of palatalized consonants From Latin E or I in hiatus BASSIARE to lower gt VL bassʲare gt OF baissier gt baisser e PALATIUM palace gt VL palatsʲu gt palais From Latin C or G followed by a front vowel i e E or I PACEM peace gt VL patsʲe gt paix CERA wax gt VL tsʲera gt tsjejra gt cire f From Latin sequences such as CT X GR FACTVM done gt Western Vulgar Latin fajtʲu gt fait LAXARE to release gt Western Vulgar Latin lajsʲare gt OF laissier gt laisser to let g NIGRVM black gt Western Vulgar Latin nejrʲu gt Early Old French neir gt noir h NOCTEM night gt Western Vulgar Latin nɔjtʲe gt nwɔjtʲe gt nujtʲe nuit i From Latin C or G followed by a except after a vowel CANEM dog gt pre French tʃʲane gt chien CARRICARE to load gt Western Vulgar Latin karregare gt kargare gt pre French tʃʲardʒʲare gt OF chargier From Latin consonantal I PEIOR pejjor worse gt Western Vulgar Latin pɛjrʲe gt pre French pjɛjrʲe gt pire j IACET he lies on the ground gt pre French dʒʲatsʲet gt dʒjajtst gt OF gist gt git k Effect of l edit In Old French l before a consonant became u and produced new diphthongs which eventually resolved into monophthongs FALSAM false gt fausse fos See the article on the phonological history of French for details Consonants edit The sound changes involving consonants are less striking than those involving vowels In some ways French is actually relatively conservative For example it preserves initial pl fl cl unlike Spanish Portuguese and Italian PLOVERE to rain gt pleuvoir Spanish llover Portuguese chover Italian piovere Lenition edit Consonants between vowels were subject to a process called lenition a type of weakening That was more extensive in French than in Spanish Portuguese or Italian For example t between vowels went through the following stages in French t gt d gt d gt no sound However in Spanish only the first two changes happened in Brazilian Portuguese only the first change happened and in Italian no change happened Compare ViTAM life gt vie with Italian vita Portuguese vida Spanish vida bida This table shows the outcomes Vulgar Latin French Examples t d no sound ViTAM life gt vie CADERE to fall gt OF cheoir gt choir k g j or no sound PACARE to pay gt payer LOCARE to put to lease gt louer to rent p b f v v or no sound SAPERE to be wise gt savoir to know DEBERE to have to gt devoir SAPV TVM known gt OF seu gt su s z CAVSAM cause gt chose thing tsʲ z POTIŌNEM drink gt VL potsʲone gt poison poison Palatalization edit As described above Late Vulgar Latin of the French area had an extensive series of palatalized consonants that developed from numerous sources The resulting sounds tended to drop a j before and or after them which formed diphthongs that later developed in complex ways Latin E and I in hiatus position directly followed by another vowel developed into j in Vulgar Latin and then combined with the preceding consonant to form a palatalized consonant All consonants could be palatalized in that fashion The resulting consonants developed as follows some developed differently when they became final as a result of the early loss of the following vowel Vulgar Latin French non final French final Examples tj gt tsʲ i s POTIŌNEM drink gt poison poison PALATIVM palace gt palais kj ttj kkj ktj gt ttsʲ c ss OF z gt s FACIAM face gt face BRACCHIVM arm gt OF braz gt bras PETTIAM piece gt piece DiRECTIARE to set to erect gt OF drecier gt dresser l dj gj gt jj i GAVDIAM joy gt joie MEDIVM middle gt mi EXAGIUM balance gt essai sʲ i s BASIARE to kiss gt baiser ssʲ i ss i s BASSIARE to lower gt baisser lʲ ill il PALEAM straw gt paille TRIPALIVM instrument of torture gt travail work m nʲ gn i n MONTANEAM mountainous gt montagne mountain BALNEVM bath gt VL banju gt bain n rʲ i r or ie r o AREAM threshing floor open space gt aire OPERARIVM worker gt ouvrier mʲ mnʲ p ng ʒ ViNDEMIA vintage gt OF vendenge gt vendange SOMNIARE to dream gt OF songier gt songer pʲ ch ʃ SAPIAM I may be wise gt je sache I may know bʲ vʲ fʲ g ʒ RABIAM rage gt rage RVBEVM red gt rouge C followed by E or I developed into Vulgar Latin tsʲ which was lenited to dzʲ between vowels later is The pronunciation ts was still present in Old French but was later simplified to s CENTVM hundred gt cent PLACERE to please gt plaisir pleasure PACEM peace gt OF pais gt paix G before E or I developed originally into Vulgar Latin j which subsequently became dʒʲ when it was not between vowels The pronunciation dʒ was still present in Old French but was later simplified to ʒ Between vowels j often disappeared GENTES people gt gents gt gents REGiNA queen gt OF reine gt reine QUADRAGINTA forty gt quarante LEGERE to read gt pre French ljɛjrʲe gt lire q C and G before A except after a vowel developed into tʃʲ and dʒʲ respectively Both tʃ and dʒ persisted the Old French but were later subsequently simplified to ʃ and ʒ CARRVM chariot gt char GAMBAM leg gt jambe MANICAM sleeve gt manka gt manche SICCAM dry fem gt seche In various consonant combinations involving C or G another consonant the C or G developed into j which proceeded to palatalize the following consonant FACTVM done gt fait LAXARE to release gt OF laissier to let gt laisser VETVLAM old gt VECLAM gt OF vieille ARTICVLVM joint gt VL arteklu gt orteil toe VIGILARE to keep watch gt OF veillier gt veiller In some cases the loss of an intertonic vowel led to a similar sequence of j or palatalized consonant another consonant which was palatalized in turn MEDIETATEM half gt mejjetate gt mejtʲat gt moitie CŌGITARE to think gt gt CV GITARE gt kujetare gt Western Vulgar Latin kujedare gt pre French kujdʲare gt OF cuidier gt cuider MANSIŌNATAM household gt OF maisniee IMPEIORARE to worsen gt OF empoirier Changes to final consonants edit As a result of the pre French loss of most final vowels all consonants could appear word finally except tʃ and dʒ which were always followed by at least a schwa stemming from either a final a or a prop vowel In Old French however all underlying voiced stops and fricatives were pronounced voiceless word finally That was clearly reflected in Old French spelling the adjectives froit cold feminine froide vif lively feminine vive larc large feminine large and the verbs je doif I must vs ils doivent they must je lef I may wash vs ils levent they may wash Most of the alternations have since disappeared partly because of morphological reshaping and partly because of respelling once most final consonants had been lost as described below but the adjectival alternation vif vs vive and similarly for other adjectives in f has remained In the Middle French most final consonants became gradually lost That proceeded in stages The loss of final consonants when appearing before another word beginning with a consonant This stage is preserved in the words six and dix which are pronounced sis dis standing alone but si di before a word beginning with a consonant and siz diz before a word beginning with a vowel If the word ended in a stressed vowel followed by s as for example in plurals the same process apparently operated as elsewhere when an s preceded a consonant with a long vowel resulting This situation is still found for example in Jerriais a dialect of the Norman language which preserves long vowels and has words ending in a vowel lengthening that vowel in the plural Loss of final consonants before a pause That left a two way pronunciation for most words with final consonants pronounced before a following vowel initial word but not elsewhere and is the origin of the modern phenomenon of liaison Loss of final consonants in all circumstances The process is still ongoing which causes a gradual loss of liaison especially in informal speech except in certain limited contexts and fixed expressions The final consonants that are normally subject to loss are t s p sometimes k and r rarely f in cle lt the earlier and still occasional clef The consonants l and ʎ were normally preserved but m n ɲ and ʃ did not occur the voiced obstruents d z b g v ʒ also did not occur A more recent countervailing tendency however is the restoration of some formerly lost final consonants as in sens now pronounced sɑ s but formerly sɑ as still found in the expressions sens dessus dessous upside down and sens devant derriere back to front The restored consonant may stem from the liaison pronunciation or the spelling and it serves to reduce ambiguity For example sɑ is also the pronunciation of cent hundred sang blood and sans without among others Effect of substrate and superstrate languages editThis article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Main article French grammar French is noticeably different from most other Romance languages Some of the changes have been attributed to substrate influence which is from Gaulish Celtic or superstrate influence which is from Frankish Germanic In practice it is difficult to say with confidence which sound and grammar changes were caused by substrate and superstrate influences since many of the changes in French have parallels in other Romance languages or are changes that are undergone by many languages in their process of development However the following are likely candidates In phonology The reintroduction of the consonant h at the beginning of a word is caused by Frankish influence and occurs mostly in words borrowed from Germanic The sound no longer exists in Standard Modern French it survives dialectally particularly in the regions of Normandy Picardy Wallonia and Louisiana but a Germanic h usually disallows liaison les halles le al les haies le ɛ les haltes le alt but a Latin h allows liaison les herbes lezɛrb les hotels lezotɛl The reintroduction of w in Northern Norman Picard Walloon Champenois Bourguignon and Bas Lorrain 44 is caused by Germanic influence All Romance languages have borrowed Germanic words containing w but all languages south of the isogloss including the ancestor of Modern French Central French converted it to ɡw which usually developed subsequently into ɡ English has borrowed words from Norman French 1066 c 1200 AD and Standard French c 1200 1400 AD which sometimes results in doublets like warranty and guarantee or warden and guardian The occurrence of an extremely strong stress accent led to the loss of unstressed vowels and the extensive modification of stressed vowels diphthongization which is likely caused by Frankish influence and possibly Celtic influence since both languages had a strong initial stress tela gt TEla gt toile 45 This feature also no longer exists in Modern French but its influence remains in the uniform final word stress in Modern French since the strong stress caused all vowels after it to be ultimately lost Nasalization resulting from compensatory vowel lengthening in stressed syllables was caused by Germanic and or Celtic stress accent Among Romance languages it occurs primarily in French Occitan Arpitan and Portuguese all of which have possible Celtic substratums However scattered dialects of Romance languages including Sardinian Spanish and Lombard also have the phenomenon as an allophonic though not phonemic property Among the four Romance languages in which it is prominent beyond divergent dialects the only one for which it is undebatably phonemic is French 46 The development of front rounded vowels y o and œ may be caused by Germanic influence as few Romance languages other than French have such vowels but Gallo Romance languages have them and share a Germanic influence At least one sound y still exists in Celtic languages A number of other scholars most famously including Romance linguist Ascoli have attributed the French sound to the Celtic substratum 47 The attribution of the sounds to Celtic influence actually predates the emergence of academic linguistics as early as the 1500s when it was attested as being called Gaulish u Among Romance languages its distribution strongly correspondent with areas of suspected Celtic substratum French Arpitan Occitan Romansch and Gallo Italic dialects along with some dialects of Portuguese The change may have occurred around the same time as a similar fronting of long u to y in the British Celtic languages On the other hand scholars such as Posner and Meyer Lubke acknowledge the possibility of Celtic influence but see the development as internally motivated 48 49 The lenition of intervocalic consonants see above may be caused by Celtic influence A similar change happened in Celtic languages about the same time and the demarcation between Romance dialects with and without this change the La Spezia Rimini Line corresponds closely to the limit of Celtic settlement in ancient Rome The lenition also affected words that were borrowed from Germanic hair lt hadir lt hatjan flan lt fladon cor royer lt ga redan etc which suggests that the tendency persisted for some time after it had been introduced The devoicing of word final voiced consonants in Old French was caused by Germanic influence e g grant grande blont blonde bastart bastarde In other areas Various words may have shifted gender under the influence from words of the same meaning or with a similar sound in Gaulish as a result of the Celtic substrate A connectionist model predicting shifts in gender assignment for common nouns more accurately predicted historical developments when the Gaulish genders of the same words were considered in the model The loss of the neuter may have been accelerated in French also because Gaulish neuters were very hard to distinguish and were possibly lost earlier than Latin neuters 50 In comparison Romanian retains the neuter gender and Italian retains it for a couple of words Portuguese Sardinian Catalan and Spanish also retain remnants of the neuter outside nouns in demonstrative pronouns and the like but they have lost the neuter for nouns The development of verb second syntax in Old French in which the verb must come in the second position in a sentence regardless of whether the subject precedes or follows the verb was probably caused by Germanic influence The first person plural ending ons Old French omes umes is likely derived from the Frankish termination ōmes umes vs Latin amus emus imus and imus cf OHG ōmes umes 51 The use of the letter k in Old French which was replaced by c and qu during the Renaissance was caused by Germanic influence Typically k was not used in Latin and other Romance languages Similarly the use of w and y also diminished The impersonal pronoun on one you they but more commonly replacing nous we or us in colloquial French first person plural pronoun see Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law from Old French h om a reduced form of homme man was a calque of the Germanic impersonal pronoun man one you they reduced form of mann man cf Old English man one you they from mann man German man one you they vs Mann man The expanded use of avoir to have over the more customary use of tenir to have hold in other Romance languages was likely the influence from the Germanic word for have which has a similar form cf Frankish haben Gothic haban Old Norse hafa English have The increased use of auxiliary verbal tenses especially the passe compose is probably caused by Germanic influence Unknown in Classical Latin the passe compose begins to appear in Old French in the early 13th century after the Germanic and the Viking invasions Its construction is identical to the one seen in all other Germanic languages at the time and earlier verb be etre past participle when there is movement indication of state or change of condition but have avoir past participle for all other verbs The passe compose is not universal to the Romance language family since only languages known to have Germanic superstrata display that type of construction and they do so in varying degrees The languages nearest to Germanic areas show constructions most similar to those seen in Germanic Italian Spanish and Catalan are other Romance languages with this type of compound verbal tense The heightened frequency of si so in Old French correlates to Old High German so and thanne The tendency in Old French to use adverbs to complete the meaning of a verb as in lever sur raise up monter en amont mount up aller avec go along go with traire avant draw forward etc is likely to be of Germanic origin The lack of a future tense in conditional clauses is likely caused by Germanic influence The reintroduction of a vigesimal system of counting by increments of 20 soixante dix 70 lit sixty ten quatre vingts 80 lit four twenties quatre vingt dix 90 lit four twenty ten is caused by North Germanic influence and first appeared in Normandy in northern France From there it spread south after the formation of the French Republic and replaced the typical Romance forms which are still used today in Belgian and Swiss French The current vigesimal system was introduced by the Vikings and adopted by the Normans who popularised its use compare Danish tresindstyve literally 3 times 20 or 60 English four score and seven for 87 citation needed Pre Roman Celtic languages in Gaul also made use of a vigesimal system but it largely vanished early in French linguistic history or became severely marginalised in its range The Nordic vigesimal system may possibly derive ultimately from the Celtic Old French also had treis vingts cinq vingts compare Welsh ugain 20 deugain 40 pedwar ugain 80 lit four twenties See also edit nbsp History portal Gaulish History of the English language History of the Italian language History of the Portuguese language History of the Spanish language Influence of French on English Language policy in France List of French words of Germanic origin Old Frankish Old French Reforms of French orthography Vulgar Latin Canadian FrenchExplanatory notes edit For the purposes of this article Vulgar Latin refers specifically to the spoken Latin that underlies French Spanish Italian and Portuguese which is technically termed Proto Italo Western Romance Note that a final schwa appears even though the t was eventually lost The word has been respelled in Modern French but the Old French result shows that a in an intertonic syllable preceding the stress was originally preserved as a schwa The p is etymological only Here j appeared both before and after the palatalized sound but Old French infinitives in ier were later converted to end in er Stressed e in an open syllable normally developed to Early Old French ei and later oi In this case however the j produced by Vulgar Latin tsʲ produced a triphthong jej which was simplified to i by dripping the middle vowel e See the note above about baisser The resulting sequence ei developed the same way as ei from the stressed open e VL ɔ normally became diphthongal wɔ in open syllables and later Old French ue However the diphthongization of ɔ and ɛ also occurred in closed syllables when a palatalized consonant followed and the resulting triphthong was simplified by dropping the middle vowel The triphthong reduction here produced i by deleting the middle vowel ɛ The triphthong resulted from the combined effects of the two palatalised consonants and was then reduced to i by dropping the middle vowel a Note that no j was dropped before the palatalized consonant in this case No j was dropped before the palatalized consonant the i in il l is purely a spelling construct which probably stems from the consonant originally being pronounced geminated as it still is in modern Italian No j was dropped before the palatalized consonant except word finally which probably stems from the consonant originally being pronounced geminated as it still is in modern Italian A j was dropped before the consonant as expected except that VL arʲ gt ier VL MN simplified to m in contrast to other Western Romance languages which generally merge it with the outcome of NN so these two had the same outcome under palatalization See above References edit Vincent Herschel Malmstrom Geography of Europe A Regional Analysis Roger Collins The Basques Blackwell 1990 Barry Raftery amp Jane McIntosh Atlas of the Celts Firefly Books 2001 Laurence Helix 24 August 2023 Histoire de la langue francaise Ellipses Edition Marketing S A p 7 ISBN 978 2 7298 6470 5 Le declin du Gaulois et sa disparition ne s expliquent pas seulement par des pratiques culturelles specifiques Lorsque les Romains conduits par Cesar envahirent la Gaule au 1er siecle avant J C celle ci romanisa de maniere progressive et profonde Pendant pres de 500 ans la fameuse periode gallo romaine le gaulois et le latin parle coexisterent au VIe siecle encore le temoignage de Gregoire de Tours atteste la survivance de la langue gauloise Hist Franc book I 32 Veniens vero Arvernos delubrum illud quod Gallica lingua Vasso Galatae vocant incendit diruit atque subvertit Coming to Clermont to the Arverni he set on fire overthrew and destroyed that shrine which they call Vasso Galatae in the Gallic tongue R Anthony Lodge French From Dialect to Standard Routledge 1993 Giovanni Battista Pellegrini Substrata in Romance Comparative and Historical Linguistics ed Rebecca Posner et al The Hague Mouton de Gruyter 1980 65 Henri Guiter Sur le substrat gaulois dans la Romania in Munus amicitae Studia linguistica in honorem Witoldi Manczak septuagenarii eds Anna Bochnakowa amp Stanislan Widlak Krakow 1995 Eugeen Roegiest Vers les sources des langues romanes Un itineraire linguistique a travers la Romania Leuven Belgium Acco 2006 83 Jean Paul Savignac Dictionnaire francais gaulois s v trop tres Paris La Difference 2004 294 5 Pierre Yves Lambert La Langue gauloise Paris France 1994 46 7 ISBN 978 2 87772 224 7 Lambert 46 47 Mots francais d origine gauloise Mots d origine gauloise Retrieved 22 October 2006 Calvert Watkins Italo Celtic revisited in H Birnbaum J Puhvel ed Ancient Indo European Dialects Berkeley Los Angeles 1966 p 29 50 Lambert 158 Henriette Walter Gerard Walter Dictionnaire des mots d origine etrangere Paris 1998 The History of the French Language Catholic Central French Archived from the original on 16 August 2006 Retrieved 22 March 2006 Walter amp Walter 1998 Le tresor de la langue francaise informatise Bernard Cerquiglini La naissance du francais Presses Universitaires de France 2nd Edition 1993 C III p 53 Cerquiglini 53 Cerquiglini 26 Etymology of frambuesa Spanish Urban T Holmes Jr A H Schutz 1938 A history of the French language p 29 Biblo amp Tannen Publishers ISBN 0 8196 0191 8 Elisabeth Ridel Les Vikings et les mots Editions Errance 2010 Baugh Cable A History of the English Language 104 L Europe aujourd hui textes des conferences et des entretiens Editions de la Baconniere 1 janvier 1986 p 56 La Vallee d Aoste enclave francophone au sud est du Mont Blanc Archived from the original on 4 December 2013 Retrieved 11 September 2013 Henriette Walter L aventure des mots francais venus d ailleurs Robert Laffont 1998 Marc Fumaroli 2011 When The World Spoke French Translated by Richard Howard New York Review of Books ISBN 978 1590173756 Eric Hobsbawm Nations and Nationalism since 1780 programme myth reality Cambridge Univ Press 1990 ISBN 0 521 43961 2 chapter II The popular protonationalism pp 80 81 French edition Gallimard 1992 According to Hobsbawm the main source for this subject is Ferdinand Brunot ed Histoire de la langue francaise Paris 1927 1943 13 volumes in particular volume IX He also refers to Michel de Certeau Dominique Julia Judith Revel Une politique de la langue la Revolution francaise et les patois l enquete de l abbe Gregoire Paris 1975 For the problem of the transformation of a minority official language into a widespread national language during and after the French Revolution see Renee Balibar L Institution du francais essai sur le co linguisme des Carolingiens a la Republique Paris 1985 also Le co linguisme PUF Que sais je 1994 but out of print The Institution of the French language essay on colinguism from the Carolingian to the Republic Finally Hobsbawm refers to Renee Balibar and Dominique Laporte Le Francais national politique et pratique de la langue nationale sous la Revolution Paris 1974 Anonymous Chirac upset by English address BBC News 24 March 2006 Anonymous French fury over English language BBC News 8 February 2007 DIFL Learn Languages Dante Institute of Foreign Languages Retrieved 15 February 2012 Sain Lucian Creole French Ethnologue Retrieved 15 February 2012 Cultural Organisations Maine Acadian Culture Preservation Commission Retrieved 15 February 2012 Herman 2000 7 Harris Martin 1997 The Romance Languages In Harris Martin Vincent Nigel eds The Romance Languages Taylor amp Francis pp 1 25 Dialetti d Italia ALI Atlante Linguistico Italiano Archived from the original on 11 December 2018 Retrieved 15 May 2019 Moyen Age l affirmation des langues vulgaires in the Encyclopaedia universalis Bernard Cerquiglini La naissance du francais Paris Presses universitaires de France 1991 Que sais je ed mise a jour 2007 Conference of Claude Hagege at the historical museum of Strasbourg p 5 read online Archived 8 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine The second t is etymological only Jacques Allieres La formation du Francais P U F Cerquiglini Bernard Une langue orpheline Ed de Minuit 2007 Rebecca Posner The Romance Languages pp 24 29 Craddock Jerry Russell Latin Legacy Versus Substratum Residue p 18 Pope M K From Latin to Modern French p 6 Posner Linguistic Change in French 250 251 Maria Polinsky and Ezra Van Everbroeck June 2003 Develop of Gender Classifications Modeling the Historical Change from Latin to French Language Vol 79 no 2 pp 365 380 Pope From Latin to modern French with especial consideration of Anglo Norman p 16 External links editHistoire de la langue francaise Archived 6 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine in French The Breton Wikipedia page on the French language gives examples from various stages in the development of French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of French amp oldid 1217069717, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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