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Wikipedia

Lingua franca

A lingua franca (/ˌlɪŋɡwə ˈfræŋkə/; lit.'Frankish tongue'; for plurals see § Usage notes),[1] also known as a bridge language, common language, trade language, auxiliary language, vehicular language, or link language, is a language systematically used to make communication possible between groups of people who do not share a native language or dialect, particularly when it is a third language that is distinct from both of the speakers' native languages.[2]

Lingua francas have developed around the world throughout human history, sometimes for commercial reasons (so-called "trade languages" facilitated trade), but also for cultural, religious, diplomatic and administrative convenience, and as a means of exchanging information between scientists and other scholars of different nationalities.[3][4] The term is taken from the medieval Mediterranean Lingua Franca, a Romance-based pidgin language used especially by traders in the Mediterranean Basin from the 11th to the 19th centuries.[5] A world language – a language spoken internationally and by many people – is a language that may function as a global lingua franca.

Characteristics

Any language regularly used for communication between people who do not share a native language is a lingua franca.[6] Lingua franca is a functional term, independent of any linguistic history or language structure.[7]

Pidgins are therefore lingua francas; creoles and arguably mixed languages may similarly be used for communication between language groups. But lingua franca is equally applicable to a non-creole language native to one nation (often a colonial power) learned as a second language and used for communication between diverse language communities in a colony or former colony.[8]

Lingua francas are often pre-existing languages with native speakers, but they can also be pidgin or creole languages developed for that specific region or context. Pidgin languages are rapidly developed and simplified combinations of two or more established languages, while creoles are generally viewed as pidgins that have evolved into fully complex languages in the course of adaptation by subsequent generations.[9] Pre-existing lingua francas such as French are used to facilitate intercommunication in large-scale trade or political matters, while pidgins and creoles often arise out of colonial situations and a specific need for communication between colonists and indigenous peoples.[10] Pre-existing lingua francas are generally widespread, highly developed languages with many native speakers.[citation needed] Conversely, pidgin languages are very simplified means of communication, containing loose structuring, few grammatical rules, and possessing few or no native speakers. Creole languages are more developed than their ancestral pidgins, utilizing more complex structure, grammar, and vocabulary, as well as having substantial communities of native speakers.[11]

Whereas a vernacular language is the native language of a specific geographical community,[12] a lingua franca is used beyond the boundaries of its original community, for trade, religious, political, or academic reasons.[13] For example, English is a vernacular in the United Kingdom but it is used as a lingua franca in the Philippines, alongside Filipino. Likewise, Arabic, French, Mandarin Chinese, and Russian serve similar purposes as industrial and educational lingua francas across regional and national boundaries.

Even though they are used as bridge languages, international auxiliary languages such as Esperanto have not had a great degree of adoption, so they are not described as lingua francas.[14]

Etymology

The term lingua franca derives from Mediterranean Lingua Franca (also known as Sabir), the pidgin language that people around the Levant and the eastern Mediterranean Sea used as the main language of commerce and diplomacy from late medieval times to the 18th century, most notably during the Renaissance era.[15][8] During that period, a simplified version of mainly Italian in the eastern and Spanish in the western Mediterranean that incorporated many loan words from Greek, the Slavic languages, Arabic, and Turkish came to be widely used as the "lingua franca" of the region, although some scholars claim that the Mediterranean Lingua Franca was just poorly used Italian.[13]

In Lingua Franca (the specific language), lingua is from the Italian for 'a language'. Franca is related to Greek Φρᾰ́γκοι (Phránkoi) and Arabic إِفْرَنْجِي (ʾifranjiyy) as well as the equivalent Italian—in all three cases, the literal sense is 'Frankish', leading to the direct translation: 'language of the Franks'. During the late Byzantine Empire, Franks was a term that applied to all Western Europeans.[16][17][18] The overall phrase of lingua franca is also speculated[by whom?] to originate from lisan al-Faranja (لسان الفرنجة) which also means the 'language of the Franks'.[19]

Through changes of the term in literature, lingua franca has come to be interpreted as a general term for pidgins, creoles, and some or all forms of vehicular languages. This transition in meaning has been attributed to the idea that pidgin languages only became widely known from the 16th century on due to European colonization of continents such as The Americas, Africa, and Asia. During this time, the need for a term to address these pidgin languages arose, hence the shift in the meaning of Lingua Franca from a single proper noun to a common noun encompassing a large class of pidgin languages.[20]

As recently as the late 20th century, some restricted the use of the generic term to mean only mixed languages that are used as vehicular languages, its original meaning.[21]

Douglas Harper's Online Etymology Dictionary states that the term Lingua Franca (as the name of the particular language) was first recorded in English during the 1670s,[22] although an even earlier example of the use of it in English is attested from 1632, where it is also referred to as "Bastard Spanish".[23]

Usage notes

The term is well established in its naturalization to English and so major dictionaries do not italicize it as a "foreign" term.[24][25][26]

Its plurals in English are lingua francas and linguae francae,[25][26] with the former being first-listed[25][26] or only-listed[24] in major dictionaries.

Examples

Historical lingua francas

The use of lingua francas has existed since antiquity.

Akkadian (died out during Classical antiquity) and then Aramaic remained the common languages of a large part of Western Asia from several earlier empires.[27][28]

Sanskrit historically served as a lingua franca throughout the majority of India and Greater India.[29][30][31][32] The Sanskrit language's historic presence is attested across a wide geography beyond South Asia. Inscriptions and literary evidence suggests that Sanskrit language was already being adopted in Southeast Asia and Central Asia in the 1st millennium CE, through monks, religious pilgrims and merchants.[33][34][35]

Until the early 20th century, Classical Chinese served as both the written lingua franca and the diplomatic language in Far East Asia including China, Mongolia, Korea, Japan, Taiwan, the Ryūkyū Kingdom, and Vietnam. In the early 20th century, vernacular written Chinese replaced Classical Chinese within China as both the written and spoken lingua franca for speakers of different Chinese dialects, and because of the declining power and cultural influence of China in East Asia, English has since replaced Classical Chinese as the lingua franca in East Asia.

Koine Greek was the lingua franca of the Hellenistic culture. Koine Greek[36][37][38] (Modern Greek: Ελληνιστική Κοινή, romanizedEllinistikí Kiní, lit.'Common Greek'; Greek: [elinistiˈci ciˈni]), also known as Alexandrian dialect, common Attic, Hellenistic, or Biblical Greek, was the common supra-regional form of Greek spoken and written during the Hellenistic period, the Roman Empire and the early Byzantine Empire. It evolved from the spread of Greek following the conquests of Alexander the Great in the fourth century BC, and served as the lingua franca of much of the Mediterranean region and the Middle East during the following centuries.[39]

Old Tamil was once the lingua franca for most of Southern South India and Sri Lanka. John Guy states that Tamil was also the lingua franca for early maritime traders from India.[40] The language and its dialects were used widely in the state of Kerala as the major language of administration, literature and common usage until the 12th century AD. Tamil was also used widely in inscriptions found in southern Andhra Pradesh districts of Chittoor and Nellore until the 12th century AD.[41] Tamil was used for inscriptions from the 10th through 14th centuries in southern Karnataka districts such as Kolar, Mysore, Mandya and Bangalore.[42]

Latin through the power of the Roman Republic became the dominant language in Italia and subsequently throughout the realms of Roman Empire. Even after the fall of Western Rome, Latin was the common language of international communication, science, scholarship and academia in Europe until well into the 18th century, when other regional vernaculars (including its own descendants, the Romance languages) supplanted it in common academic and political usage, and it eventually became a dead language in the modern linguistic definition.

Sogdian was used to facilitate trade between those who spoke different languages along the Silk Road, which is why native speakers of Sogdian were employed as translators in Tang China.[43] The Sogdians also ended up circulating spiritual beliefs and texts, including those of Buddhism and Christianity, thanks to their ability to communicate to many people in the region through their native language.[44]

Old Church Slavonic, an Eastern South Slavic language, is the first Slavic literary language. Between 9th and 11th century, it was lingua franca of great part of the predominantly Slavic states and populations in Southeast and Eastern Europe, in liturgy and church organization, culture, literature, education and diplomacy, as Official language, and National language in the case of Bulgaria. It was the first national and also international Slavic literary language (autonym словѣ́ньскъ ѩꙁꙑ́къ, slověnĭskŭ językŭ).[45][46] The Glagolitic alphabet was originally used at both schools, though the Cyrillic script was developed early on at the Preslav Literary School, where it superseded Glagolitic as official in Bulgaria in 893. Old Church Slavonic spread to other South-Eastern, Central, and Eastern European Slavic territories, most notably Croatia, Serbia, Bohemia, Lesser Poland, and principalities of the Kievan Rus' while retaining characteristically South Slavic linguistic features. It spread also to not completely Slavic territories between the Carpathian Mountains, the Danube and the Black sea, corresponding to Wallachia and Moldavia. Nowadays, the Cyrillic script writing system is used for various languages across Eurasia and is used as the national script in various Slavic, Turkic, Mongolic, Uralic, Caucasian and Iranic-speaking countries in Southeastern Europe, Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, Central Asia, North Asia, and East Asia.

The Mediterranean Lingua Franca was largely based on Italian and Provençal. This language was spoken from the 11th to 19th centuries around the Mediterranean basin, particularly in the European commercial empires of Italian cities (Genoa, Venice, Florence, Milan, Pisa, Siena) and in trading ports located throughout the eastern Mediterranean rim.[47]

During the Renaissance, standard Italian was spoken as a language of culture in the main royal courts of Europe, and among intellectuals. This lasted from the 14th century to the end of the 16th, when French replaced Italian as the usual lingua franca in northern Europe.[citation needed] On the other hand, Italian musical terms, in particular dynamic and tempo notations, have continued in use to the present day, especially for classical music, in music revues and program notes as well as in printed scores. Italian is considered the language of Opera.[48]

Modern

English

 
English language distribution
  Regions where English is a majority native language
  Regions where English is official or widely spoken, but not as a primary native language

English is often used by non-native English speakers who have different mother tongues to communicate with one another.[49] In the European Union, the use of English as a lingua franca has led researchers to investigate whether a new dialect of English (Euro English) has emerged.[50]

When the United Kingdom became a colonial power, English served as the lingua franca of the colonies of the British Empire. In the post-colonial period, some of the newly created nations which had multiple indigenous languages opted to continue using English as one of their official languages. Examples of these nations include Ghana and South Africa.[49]

English is also taught in schools and used as a lingua franca in Singapore, a country that has four official languages.[51]

In Qatar, the medical community is primarily made up of workers from countries without English as a native language. In medical practices and hospitals, nurses typically communicate with other professionals in English as a lingua franca.[52] This occurrence has led to interest in researching the consequences and affordances of the medical community communicating in a lingua franca.[52]

English is also used as a lingua franca in Switzerland.[53]

English is the lingua franca of Fiji, despite being the least commonly spoken of Fiji's three official languages as a native language, but spoken by almost everyone as a second language.[54][55]

Spanish

The Spanish language spread mainly throughout the New World, becoming a lingua franca in the territories and colonies of the Spanish Empire, as well as in parts of Africa, Asia and Oceania. It became the language of global trade until Napoleonic Wars[citation needed] and the breakup of the Spanish Empire at the beginning of the 19th century. Spanish was used as a lingua franca throughout the former Spanish Colonial Empire, including territory in present-day U.S., but particularly in present-day Mexico, Spanish Caribbean, Central, South America and the Philippines, and still remains the lingua franca within Hispanic America. It is also widely understood, and spoken to different degrees, by many people in Brazil, especially in the South and Southeast, and by many in the Southwestern United States.

At present it is the second most used language in international trade, and the third most used in politics, diplomacy and culture after English and French.[56]

It is also one of the most taught foreign languages throughout the world[57] and is also one of the six official languages of the United Nations.

French

 
The Francophone World
  States where French is the majority native language
  States where it is an official or administrative language but not a majority native language
  States where it is a minority or secondary language
  States that have a local francophone minority

Although not spoken as a first language by most African French speakers, French is a lingua franca in most Western and Central African countries and an official language of many, a remnant of French and Belgian colonialism. These African countries and others are members of the Francophonie.[58] During the 17th century, French replaced Latin as the most important language of diplomacy and international relations (lingua franca). It retained this role until approximately the middle of the 20th century, when it was replaced by English as the United States became the dominant global power following the Second World War.[59][60] Stanley Meisler of the Los Angeles Times said that the fact that the Treaty of Versailles was written in English as well as French was the "first diplomatic blow" against the language.[61]

German

 
Legal statuses of German in Europe:
  "German Sprachraum": German is (co-)official language and first language of the majority of the population
  German is a co-official language, but not the first language of the majority of the population
  German (or a German dialect) is a legally recognized minority language (Squares: Geographic distribution too dispersed/small for map scale)
  German (or a variety of German) is spoken by a sizable minority, but has no legal recognition

German is used as a lingua franca in Switzerland to some extent, however English is generally preferred to avoid favouring it over the three other official languages.

Arabic

 
Status of Arabic language map
  Exclusive official language
  One of official languages, majority
  One of official languages, minority

Arabic was used as a lingua franca across the Islamic empires, whose sizes necessitated the need for a common language, and spread across the Arab and Muslim worlds.[62] In Djibouti and parts of Eritrea, both of which are countries where multiple official languages are spoken, Arabic has emerged as a lingua franca in part thanks to the population of the region being predominantly Muslim and Arabic playing a crucial role in the religion of Islam. In addition, after having fled from Eritrea due to ongoing warfare and gone to some of the nearby Arab countries, Eritrean emigrants are contributing to Arabic becoming a lingua franca in the region by coming back to their homelands having picked up the Arabic language.[63]

Russian

 
Areas where Russian is the majority language (medium blue) or a minority language (light blue)

Russian is in use and widely understood in Central Asia and the Caucasus, areas formerly part of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union, and in much of Central, Southeast and Eastern Europe, formerly part of the Warsaw Pact. It remains the official language of the Commonwealth of Independent States. Russian is also one of the six official languages of the United Nations.[64]

Portuguese

 
The Lusophone world
  Native language
  Official and administrative language
  Cultural or secondary language
  Portuguese-speaking minorities

Portuguese served as lingua franca in the Portuguese Empire, Africa, South America and Asia in the 15th and 16th centuries. When the Portuguese started exploring the seas of Africa, America, Asia and Oceania, they tried to communicate with the natives by mixing a Portuguese-influenced version of lingua franca with the local languages. When Dutch, English or French ships came to compete with the Portuguese, the crews tried to learn this "broken Portuguese". Through a process of change the lingua franca and Portuguese lexicon was replaced with the languages of the people in contact. Portuguese remains an important lingua franca in the Portuguese-speaking African countries, East Timor, and to a certain extent in Macau where it is recognized as an official language alongside Chinese though in practice not commonly spoken.

Chinese

Today, Mandarin Chinese is the lingua franca of China and Taiwan, which are home to many mutually unintelligible varieties of Chinese and, in the case of Taiwan, indigenous Formosan languages. It is also used as a lingua franca and language of education among various Chinese diaspora communities, particularly in Southeast Asia.

Hindustani

 
Areas (red) where Hindustani (Delhlavi or Kauravi) is the native language, and the much wider area of the Indo-Aryan language group (gray), where it is lingua franca

The Hindustani language (Hindi-Urdu) is the lingua franca of Pakistan and Northern India.[65][self-published source?][66][page needed] Many Hindi speaking North Indian states have adopted the Three-language formula in which students are taught: "(a) Hindi (with Sanskrit as part of the composite course); (b) Any other modern Indian language including Urdu and (c) English or any other modern European language." The order in non-Hindi speaking states is: "(a) the major language of the state or region; (b) Hindi; (c) Any other modern Indian language including Urdu but excluding (a) and (b) above; and (d) English or any other modern European language."[67] Hindi has also emerged as a lingua franca for the locals of Arunachal Pradesh, a linguistically diverse state in Northeast India.[68][69] It is estimated that 90 percent of the state's population knows Hindi.[70]

Malay

 
Countries where Malay is spoken

Indonesian – a standardized form of the Malay language understood across the Malay world including Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei, originating from a variant spoken in Riau – is the official language and a lingua franca in Indonesia, although Javanese has more native speakers. Still, Indonesian is the sole official language and is spoken throughout the country even though it is the first language of a very small minority of Indonesians.[71]

Swahili

 
Geographic extent of Swahili. Dark green: native range. Medium green: official use. Light green: bilingual use but not official.

Swahili developed as a lingua franca between several Bantu-speaking tribal groups on the east coast of Africa with heavy influence from Arabic.[72] The earliest examples of writing in Swahili are from 1711.[73] In the early 19th century the use of Swahili as a lingua franca moved inland with the Arabic ivory and slave traders. It was eventually adopted by Europeans as well during periods of colonization in the area. German colonizers used it as the language of administration in German East Africa, later becoming Tanganyika, which influenced the choice to use it as a national language in what is now independent Tanzania.[72] Swahili (known to natives as Kiswahili) is currently one of the national languages and it is taught in schools and universities in several East African countries, thus prompting it to be regarded as a modern-day lingua franca by many people in the region. Several Pan-African writers and politicians have unsuccessfully called for Swahili to become the lingua franca of Africa as a means of unifying the African continent and overcoming the legacy of colonialism.[74]

Persian

 
Areas with significant numbers of people whose first language is Persian (including dialects)

Persian, an Iranian language, is the official language of Iran, Afghanistan (Dari) and Tajikistan (Tajik). It acts as a lingua franca in both Iran and Afghanistan between the various ethnic groups in those countries. The Persian language in South Asia, before the British colonized the Indian subcontinent, was the region's lingua franca and a widely used official language in north India and Pakistan.

Hausa

Hausa can also be seen as a lingua franca because it is the language of communication between speakers of different languages in Northern Nigeria and other West African countries,[75] including the northern region of Ghana.[76]

Amharic

Amharic is the lingua franca and most widely spoken language in Ethiopia and is known by most people who speak another Ethiopian language.[77][78]

Creole languages

Creoles, such as Nigerian Pidgin in Nigeria, are used as lingua francas across the world. This is especially true in Africa, the Caribbean, Melanesia, Southeast Asia and in parts of Australia by Indigenous Australians.

Sign languages

 
Rough territorial extent of Hand Talk (in purple) within the US and Canada

The majority of pre-colonial North American nations communicated internationally using Hand Talk.[79][80] Also called Prairie Sign Language, Plains Indian Sign Language, or First Nations Sign Language, this language functioned predominantly—and still continues to function[81]—as a second language within most of the (now historical) countries of the Great Plains, from Newe Segobia in the West to Anishinaabewaki in the East, down into what are now the northern states of Mexico and up into Cree Country stopping before Denendeh.[82][83] The relationship remains unknown between Hand Talk and other manual Indigenous languages like Keresan Sign Language and Plateau Sign Language, the latter of which is now extinct (though Ktunaxa Sign Language is still spoken).[84] Although unrelated, perhaps Inuit Sign Language played and continues to play a similar role across Inuit Nunangat and the various Inuit dialects. The original Hand Talk is found across Indian Country in pockets, but it has also been employed to create new or revive old languages, such as with Oneida Sign Language.[85]

International Sign, though a pidgin language, is present at most significant international gatherings, from which interpretations of national sign languages are given, such as in LSF, ASL, BSL, Libras, or Auslan. International Sign, or IS and formerly Gestuno, interpreters can be found at many European Union parliamentary or committee sittings,[86] during certain United Nations affaires,[87] conducting international sporting events like the Deaflympics, in all World Federation of the Deaf functions, and across similar settings. The language has few set internal grammatical rules, instead co-opting national vocabularies of the speaker and audience, and modifying the words to bridge linguistic gaps, with heavy use of gesture and classifiers.[88]

See also

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Further reading

  • Hall, R.A. Jr. (1966). Pidgin and Creole Languages. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-0173-9.
  • Heine, Bernd (1970). Status and Use of African Lingua Francas. ISBN 3-8039-0033-6.
  • Kahane, Henry Romanos (1958). The Lingua Franca in the Levant.
  • Melatti, Julio Cezar (1983). Índios do Brasil (48 ed.). São Paulo: Hucitec Press.
  • Ostler, Nicholas (2005). Empires of the Word. London: Harper. ISBN 978-0-00-711871-7.
  • Ostler, Nicholas (2010). The Last Lingua Franca. New York: Walker. ISBN 978-0-8027-1771-9.

External links

  • "English – the universal language on the Internet?".
  • . Archived from the original on 28 March 2009.
  • . Archived from the original on 9 April 2009. from Juan del Encina, Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme, Carlo Goldoni's L'Impresario da Smyrna, Diego de Haedo and other sources
  • . Archived from the original on 8 April 2010.

lingua, franca, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, french, language, lingua, franca, frankish, tongue, plurals, usage, notes, also, known, bridge, language, common, language, trade, language, auxiliary, language, vehicular, language, link, language, . For other uses see Lingua franca disambiguation Not to be confused with French language A lingua franca ˌ l ɪ ŋ ɡ w e ˈ f r ae ŋ k e lit Frankish tongue for plurals see Usage notes 1 also known as a bridge language common language trade language auxiliary language vehicular language or link language is a language systematically used to make communication possible between groups of people who do not share a native language or dialect particularly when it is a third language that is distinct from both of the speakers native languages 2 Lingua francas have developed around the world throughout human history sometimes for commercial reasons so called trade languages facilitated trade but also for cultural religious diplomatic and administrative convenience and as a means of exchanging information between scientists and other scholars of different nationalities 3 4 The term is taken from the medieval Mediterranean Lingua Franca a Romance based pidgin language used especially by traders in the Mediterranean Basin from the 11th to the 19th centuries 5 A world language a language spoken internationally and by many people is a language that may function as a global lingua franca Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Etymology 3 Usage notes 4 Examples 4 1 Historical lingua francas 4 2 Modern 4 2 1 English 4 2 2 Spanish 4 2 3 French 4 2 4 German 4 2 5 Arabic 4 2 6 Russian 4 2 7 Portuguese 4 2 8 Chinese 4 2 9 Hindustani 4 2 10 Malay 4 2 11 Swahili 4 2 12 Persian 4 2 13 Hausa 4 2 14 Amharic 4 2 15 Creole languages 4 2 16 Sign languages 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksCharacteristics EditAny language regularly used for communication between people who do not share a native language is a lingua franca 6 Lingua franca is a functional term independent of any linguistic history or language structure 7 Pidgins are therefore lingua francas creoles and arguably mixed languages may similarly be used for communication between language groups But lingua franca is equally applicable to a non creole language native to one nation often a colonial power learned as a second language and used for communication between diverse language communities in a colony or former colony 8 Lingua francas are often pre existing languages with native speakers but they can also be pidgin or creole languages developed for that specific region or context Pidgin languages are rapidly developed and simplified combinations of two or more established languages while creoles are generally viewed as pidgins that have evolved into fully complex languages in the course of adaptation by subsequent generations 9 Pre existing lingua francas such as French are used to facilitate intercommunication in large scale trade or political matters while pidgins and creoles often arise out of colonial situations and a specific need for communication between colonists and indigenous peoples 10 Pre existing lingua francas are generally widespread highly developed languages with many native speakers citation needed Conversely pidgin languages are very simplified means of communication containing loose structuring few grammatical rules and possessing few or no native speakers Creole languages are more developed than their ancestral pidgins utilizing more complex structure grammar and vocabulary as well as having substantial communities of native speakers 11 Whereas a vernacular language is the native language of a specific geographical community 12 a lingua franca is used beyond the boundaries of its original community for trade religious political or academic reasons 13 For example English is a vernacular in the United Kingdom but it is used as a lingua franca in the Philippines alongside Filipino Likewise Arabic French Mandarin Chinese and Russian serve similar purposes as industrial and educational lingua francas across regional and national boundaries Even though they are used as bridge languages international auxiliary languages such as Esperanto have not had a great degree of adoption so they are not described as lingua francas 14 Etymology EditThe term lingua franca derives from Mediterranean Lingua Franca also known as Sabir the pidgin language that people around the Levant and the eastern Mediterranean Sea used as the main language of commerce and diplomacy from late medieval times to the 18th century most notably during the Renaissance era 15 8 During that period a simplified version of mainly Italian in the eastern and Spanish in the western Mediterranean that incorporated many loan words from Greek the Slavic languages Arabic and Turkish came to be widely used as the lingua franca of the region although some scholars claim that the Mediterranean Lingua Franca was just poorly used Italian 13 In Lingua Franca the specific language lingua is from the Italian for a language Franca is related to Greek Frᾰ gkoi Phrankoi and Arabic إ ف ر ن ج ي ʾifranjiyy as well as the equivalent Italian in all three cases the literal sense is Frankish leading to the direct translation language of the Franks During the late Byzantine Empire Franks was a term that applied to all Western Europeans 16 17 18 The overall phrase of lingua franca is also speculated by whom to originate from lisan al Faranja لسان الفرنجة which also means the language of the Franks 19 Through changes of the term in literature lingua franca has come to be interpreted as a general term for pidgins creoles and some or all forms of vehicular languages This transition in meaning has been attributed to the idea that pidgin languages only became widely known from the 16th century on due to European colonization of continents such as The Americas Africa and Asia During this time the need for a term to address these pidgin languages arose hence the shift in the meaning of Lingua Franca from a single proper noun to a common noun encompassing a large class of pidgin languages 20 As recently as the late 20th century some restricted the use of the generic term to mean only mixed languages that are used as vehicular languages its original meaning 21 Douglas Harper s Online Etymology Dictionary states that the term Lingua Franca as the name of the particular language was first recorded in English during the 1670s 22 although an even earlier example of the use of it in English is attested from 1632 where it is also referred to as Bastard Spanish 23 Usage notes EditThe term is well established in its naturalization to English and so major dictionaries do not italicize it as a foreign term 24 25 26 Its plurals in English are lingua francas and linguae francae 25 26 with the former being first listed 25 26 or only listed 24 in major dictionaries Examples EditMain article List of lingua francas Historical lingua francas Edit Koine Greek The use of lingua francas has existed since antiquity Akkadian died out during Classical antiquity and then Aramaic remained the common languages of a large part of Western Asia from several earlier empires 27 28 Sanskrit historically served as a lingua franca throughout the majority of India and Greater India 29 30 31 32 The Sanskrit language s historic presence is attested across a wide geography beyond South Asia Inscriptions and literary evidence suggests that Sanskrit language was already being adopted in Southeast Asia and Central Asia in the 1st millennium CE through monks religious pilgrims and merchants 33 34 35 Until the early 20th century Classical Chinese served as both the written lingua franca and the diplomatic language in Far East Asia including China Mongolia Korea Japan Taiwan the Ryukyu Kingdom and Vietnam In the early 20th century vernacular written Chinese replaced Classical Chinese within China as both the written and spoken lingua franca for speakers of different Chinese dialects and because of the declining power and cultural influence of China in East Asia English has since replaced Classical Chinese as the lingua franca in East Asia Koine Greek was the lingua franca of the Hellenistic culture Koine Greek 36 37 38 Modern Greek Ellhnistikh Koinh romanized Ellinistiki Kini lit Common Greek Greek elinistiˈci ciˈni also known as Alexandrian dialect common Attic Hellenistic or Biblical Greek was the common supra regional form of Greek spoken and written during the Hellenistic period the Roman Empire and the early Byzantine Empire It evolved from the spread of Greek following the conquests of Alexander the Great in the fourth century BC and served as the lingua franca of much of the Mediterranean region and the Middle East during the following centuries 39 Old Tamil was once the lingua franca for most of Southern South India and Sri Lanka John Guy states that Tamil was also the lingua franca for early maritime traders from India 40 The language and its dialects were used widely in the state of Kerala as the major language of administration literature and common usage until the 12th century AD Tamil was also used widely in inscriptions found in southern Andhra Pradesh districts of Chittoor and Nellore until the 12th century AD 41 Tamil was used for inscriptions from the 10th through 14th centuries in southern Karnataka districts such as Kolar Mysore Mandya and Bangalore 42 Latin through the power of the Roman Republic became the dominant language in Italia and subsequently throughout the realms of Roman Empire Even after the fall of Western Rome Latin was the common language of international communication science scholarship and academia in Europe until well into the 18th century when other regional vernaculars including its own descendants the Romance languages supplanted it in common academic and political usage and it eventually became a dead language in the modern linguistic definition Sogdian was used to facilitate trade between those who spoke different languages along the Silk Road which is why native speakers of Sogdian were employed as translators in Tang China 43 The Sogdians also ended up circulating spiritual beliefs and texts including those of Buddhism and Christianity thanks to their ability to communicate to many people in the region through their native language 44 Old Church Slavonic an Eastern South Slavic language is the first Slavic literary language Between 9th and 11th century it was lingua franca of great part of the predominantly Slavic states and populations in Southeast and Eastern Europe in liturgy and church organization culture literature education and diplomacy as Official language and National language in the case of Bulgaria It was the first national and also international Slavic literary language autonym slovѣ nsk ѩꙁꙑ k slovenĭskŭ jezykŭ 45 46 The Glagolitic alphabet was originally used at both schools though the Cyrillic script was developed early on at the Preslav Literary School where it superseded Glagolitic as official in Bulgaria in 893 Old Church Slavonic spread to other South Eastern Central and Eastern European Slavic territories most notably Croatia Serbia Bohemia Lesser Poland and principalities of the Kievan Rus while retaining characteristically South Slavic linguistic features It spread also to not completely Slavic territories between the Carpathian Mountains the Danube and the Black sea corresponding to Wallachia and Moldavia Nowadays the Cyrillic script writing system is used for various languages across Eurasia and is used as the national script in various Slavic Turkic Mongolic Uralic Caucasian and Iranic speaking countries in Southeastern Europe Eastern Europe the Caucasus Central Asia North Asia and East Asia The Mediterranean Lingua Franca was largely based on Italian and Provencal This language was spoken from the 11th to 19th centuries around the Mediterranean basin particularly in the European commercial empires of Italian cities Genoa Venice Florence Milan Pisa Siena and in trading ports located throughout the eastern Mediterranean rim 47 During the Renaissance standard Italian was spoken as a language of culture in the main royal courts of Europe and among intellectuals This lasted from the 14th century to the end of the 16th when French replaced Italian as the usual lingua franca in northern Europe citation needed On the other hand Italian musical terms in particular dynamic and tempo notations have continued in use to the present day especially for classical music in music revues and program notes as well as in printed scores Italian is considered the language of Opera 48 Modern Edit English Edit Main article English as a lingua franca English language distribution Regions where English is a majority native language Regions where English is official or widely spoken but not as a primary native language English is often used by non native English speakers who have different mother tongues to communicate with one another 49 In the European Union the use of English as a lingua franca has led researchers to investigate whether a new dialect of English Euro English has emerged 50 When the United Kingdom became a colonial power English served as the lingua franca of the colonies of the British Empire In the post colonial period some of the newly created nations which had multiple indigenous languages opted to continue using English as one of their official languages Examples of these nations include Ghana and South Africa 49 English is also taught in schools and used as a lingua franca in Singapore a country that has four official languages 51 In Qatar the medical community is primarily made up of workers from countries without English as a native language In medical practices and hospitals nurses typically communicate with other professionals in English as a lingua franca 52 This occurrence has led to interest in researching the consequences and affordances of the medical community communicating in a lingua franca 52 English is also used as a lingua franca in Switzerland 53 English is the lingua franca of Fiji despite being the least commonly spoken of Fiji s three official languages as a native language but spoken by almost everyone as a second language 54 55 Spanish Edit The Spanish language spread mainly throughout the New World becoming a lingua franca in the territories and colonies of the Spanish Empire as well as in parts of Africa Asia and Oceania It became the language of global trade until Napoleonic Wars citation needed and the breakup of the Spanish Empire at the beginning of the 19th century Spanish was used as a lingua franca throughout the former Spanish Colonial Empire including territory in present day U S but particularly in present day Mexico Spanish Caribbean Central South America and the Philippines and still remains the lingua franca within Hispanic America It is also widely understood and spoken to different degrees by many people in Brazil especially in the South and Southeast and by many in the Southwestern United States At present it is the second most used language in international trade and the third most used in politics diplomacy and culture after English and French 56 It is also one of the most taught foreign languages throughout the world 57 and is also one of the six official languages of the United Nations French Edit The Francophone World States where French is the majority native language States where it is an official or administrative language but not a majority native language States where it is a minority or secondary language States that have a local francophone minority Although not spoken as a first language by most African French speakers French is a lingua franca in most Western and Central African countries and an official language of many a remnant of French and Belgian colonialism These African countries and others are members of the Francophonie 58 During the 17th century French replaced Latin as the most important language of diplomacy and international relations lingua franca It retained this role until approximately the middle of the 20th century when it was replaced by English as the United States became the dominant global power following the Second World War 59 60 Stanley Meisler of the Los Angeles Times said that the fact that the Treaty of Versailles was written in English as well as French was the first diplomatic blow against the language 61 German Edit Legal statuses of German in Europe German Sprachraum German is co official language and first language of the majority of the population German is a co official language but not the first language of the majority of the population German or a German dialect is a legally recognized minority language Squares Geographic distribution too dispersed small for map scale German or a variety of German is spoken by a sizable minority but has no legal recognition German is used as a lingua franca in Switzerland to some extent however English is generally preferred to avoid favouring it over the three other official languages Arabic Edit Status of Arabic language map Exclusive official language One of official languages majority One of official languages minority Arabic was used as a lingua franca across the Islamic empires whose sizes necessitated the need for a common language and spread across the Arab and Muslim worlds 62 In Djibouti and parts of Eritrea both of which are countries where multiple official languages are spoken Arabic has emerged as a lingua franca in part thanks to the population of the region being predominantly Muslim and Arabic playing a crucial role in the religion of Islam In addition after having fled from Eritrea due to ongoing warfare and gone to some of the nearby Arab countries Eritrean emigrants are contributing to Arabic becoming a lingua franca in the region by coming back to their homelands having picked up the Arabic language 63 Russian Edit Areas where Russian is the majority language medium blue or a minority language light blue Russian is in use and widely understood in Central Asia and the Caucasus areas formerly part of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union and in much of Central Southeast and Eastern Europe formerly part of the Warsaw Pact It remains the official language of the Commonwealth of Independent States Russian is also one of the six official languages of the United Nations 64 Portuguese Edit The Lusophone world Native language Official and administrative language Cultural or secondary language Portuguese speaking minorities Portuguese based creole languages Portuguese served as lingua franca in the Portuguese Empire Africa South America and Asia in the 15th and 16th centuries When the Portuguese started exploring the seas of Africa America Asia and Oceania they tried to communicate with the natives by mixing a Portuguese influenced version of lingua franca with the local languages When Dutch English or French ships came to compete with the Portuguese the crews tried to learn this broken Portuguese Through a process of change the lingua franca and Portuguese lexicon was replaced with the languages of the people in contact Portuguese remains an important lingua franca in the Portuguese speaking African countries East Timor and to a certain extent in Macau where it is recognized as an official language alongside Chinese though in practice not commonly spoken Chinese Edit Today Mandarin Chinese is the lingua franca of China and Taiwan which are home to many mutually unintelligible varieties of Chinese and in the case of Taiwan indigenous Formosan languages It is also used as a lingua franca and language of education among various Chinese diaspora communities particularly in Southeast Asia Hindustani Edit Areas red where Hindustani Delhlavi or Kauravi is the native language and the much wider area of the Indo Aryan language group gray where it is lingua franca The Hindustani language Hindi Urdu is the lingua franca of Pakistan and Northern India 65 self published source 66 page needed Many Hindi speaking North Indian states have adopted the Three language formula in which students are taught a Hindi with Sanskrit as part of the composite course b Any other modern Indian language including Urdu and c English or any other modern European language The order in non Hindi speaking states is a the major language of the state or region b Hindi c Any other modern Indian language including Urdu but excluding a and b above and d English or any other modern European language 67 Hindi has also emerged as a lingua franca for the locals of Arunachal Pradesh a linguistically diverse state in Northeast India 68 69 It is estimated that 90 percent of the state s population knows Hindi 70 Malay Edit Countries where Malay is spoken Indonesian a standardized form of the Malay language understood across the Malay world including Malaysia Singapore and Brunei originating from a variant spoken in Riau is the official language and a lingua franca in Indonesia although Javanese has more native speakers Still Indonesian is the sole official language and is spoken throughout the country even though it is the first language of a very small minority of Indonesians 71 Swahili Edit Geographic extent of Swahili Dark green native range Medium green official use Light green bilingual use but not official Swahili developed as a lingua franca between several Bantu speaking tribal groups on the east coast of Africa with heavy influence from Arabic 72 The earliest examples of writing in Swahili are from 1711 73 In the early 19th century the use of Swahili as a lingua franca moved inland with the Arabic ivory and slave traders It was eventually adopted by Europeans as well during periods of colonization in the area German colonizers used it as the language of administration in German East Africa later becoming Tanganyika which influenced the choice to use it as a national language in what is now independent Tanzania 72 Swahili known to natives as Kiswahili is currently one of the national languages and it is taught in schools and universities in several East African countries thus prompting it to be regarded as a modern day lingua franca by many people in the region Several Pan African writers and politicians have unsuccessfully called for Swahili to become the lingua franca of Africa as a means of unifying the African continent and overcoming the legacy of colonialism 74 Persian Edit Areas with significant numbers of people whose first language is Persian including dialects Persian an Iranian language is the official language of Iran Afghanistan Dari and Tajikistan Tajik It acts as a lingua franca in both Iran and Afghanistan between the various ethnic groups in those countries The Persian language in South Asia before the British colonized the Indian subcontinent was the region s lingua franca and a widely used official language in north India and Pakistan Hausa Edit Hausa can also be seen as a lingua franca because it is the language of communication between speakers of different languages in Northern Nigeria and other West African countries 75 including the northern region of Ghana 76 Amharic Edit Amharic is the lingua franca and most widely spoken language in Ethiopia and is known by most people who speak another Ethiopian language 77 78 Creole languages Edit Creoles such as Nigerian Pidgin in Nigeria are used as lingua francas across the world This is especially true in Africa the Caribbean Melanesia Southeast Asia and in parts of Australia by Indigenous Australians Sign languages Edit Rough territorial extent of Hand Talk in purple within the US and Canada The majority of pre colonial North American nations communicated internationally using Hand Talk 79 80 Also called Prairie Sign Language Plains Indian Sign Language or First Nations Sign Language this language functioned predominantly and still continues to function 81 as a second language within most of the now historical countries of the Great Plains from Newe Segobia in the West to Anishinaabewaki in the East down into what are now the northern states of Mexico and up into Cree Country stopping before Denendeh 82 83 The relationship remains unknown between Hand Talk and other manual Indigenous languages like Keresan Sign Language and Plateau Sign Language the latter of which is now extinct though Ktunaxa Sign Language is still spoken 84 Although unrelated perhaps Inuit Sign Language played and continues to play a similar role across Inuit Nunangat and the various Inuit dialects The original Hand Talk is found across Indian Country in pockets but it has also been employed to create new or revive old languages such as with Oneida Sign Language 85 International Sign though a pidgin language is present at most significant international gatherings from which interpretations of national sign languages are given such as in LSF ASL BSL Libras or Auslan International Sign or IS and formerly Gestuno interpreters can be found at many European Union parliamentary or committee sittings 86 during certain United Nations affaires 87 conducting international sporting events like the Deaflympics in all World Federation of the Deaf functions and across similar settings The language has few set internal grammatical rules instead co opting national vocabularies of the speaker and audience and modifying the words to bridge linguistic gaps with heavy use of gesture and classifiers 88 See also Edit Languages portal Linguistics portalRosetta Stone Global language system International auxiliary language Koine language Language contact List of languages by number of native speakers List of languages by total number of speakers Mixed language Pidgin Interlinguistics Universal language Working language World languageReferences Edit lingua franca definition of lingua franca in English from the Oxford dictionary Oxforddictionaries com Archived from the original on 3 July 2013 Retrieved 18 June 2015 Viacheslav A Chirikba The problem of the Caucasian Sprachbund in Pieter Muysken ed From Linguistic Areas to Areal Linguistics 2008 p 31 ISBN 90 272 3100 1 Nye Mary Jo 2016 Speaking in Tongues Science s centuries long hunt for a 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30 October 2021 Retrieved 11 May 2021 Further reading EditHall R A Jr 1966 Pidgin and Creole Languages Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 0173 9 Heine Bernd 1970 Status and Use of African Lingua Francas ISBN 3 8039 0033 6 Kahane Henry Romanos 1958 The Lingua Franca in the Levant Melatti Julio Cezar 1983 Indios do Brasil 48 ed Sao Paulo Hucitec Press Ostler Nicholas 2005 Empires of the Word London Harper ISBN 978 0 00 711871 7 Ostler Nicholas 2010 The Last Lingua Franca New York Walker ISBN 978 0 8027 1771 9 External links EditLingua franca at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Data from Wikidata English the universal language on the Internet Lingua franca del Mediterraneo o Sabir of professor Francesco Bruni in Italian Archived from the original on 28 March 2009 Sample texts Archived from the original on 9 April 2009 from Juan del Encina Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme Carlo Goldoni s L Impresario da Smyrna Diego de Haedo and other sources An introduction to the original Mediterranean Lingua Franca Archived from the original on 8 April 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lingua franca amp oldid 1130205142, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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