The French Language - A Languages of the World Primer
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By: TJ Leary
French is one of the many so-called Romance languages that
grew out of "Vulgar Latin". It is part of the linguistic
subgroup known as Langue d'oil that developed in northern
France in the middle ages. It differs from the other two main
subgroups spoken in France, Langue d'oc (also known as Occitan)
and Franco-Provencal spoken in southern France, in that it was
heavily influenced by the Germanic languages brought in by the
invading Franks.
In practical terms what we now know as modern French began
to come to the fore following the 1539 Villers-Cotterets
Ordinance in which King Francis I made Parisian French the
official State language. Whilst the expressly declared goal was
to displace Latin, the knock-on effect on other regional French
languages cannot have gone unnoticed. To this day, it is
official French state policy to promote French to the detriment
of the other regional languages. The proof of this is that
despite the fact that France is a signatory to the European
Charter for Regional Languages it cannot ratify it because to
do so would contravene the current French constitution.
The decree was followed by the publication of the first
French Grammar in 1550 as major efforts were made to unify and
purify the language. In 1634, this process was
institutionalised with the founding of the Academie francaise
(French Academy) by Cardinal Richelieu. As French power rose
during the 17th and 18th centuries so did the reach of the
French language, becoming the lingua franca across most of
Europe, before being exported worldwide as France and Belgium
became colonial powers.
Related languages French is most closely related to the
other Romance languages in the Langue d'oil subgroup (the bulk
of northern France and Belgium). To refer to such languages
(for example Picard and Walloon) as dialects of French is to
profoundly misunderstand the shared roots and the process by
which all of these languages developed side by side over time.
French is also closely related to the other Romance languages
spoken in France. Partly because of its part Germanic roots,
mutual intelligibility between French and the Romance languages
spoken outside France is, however, much lower than say between
Italian and Spanish despite their greater geographic
distance.
Current status French is an official language of the United
Nations, the European Union and a wide range of other
international bodies. In addition to being an official language
in close to 30 countries, La Francophonie (the primary
international organisation of French-speaking countries) has
over fifty members, showing the continued global influence of
the French language despite the decline in French Power since
the second World War. Members come from all corners of the
globe.
Despite its European origins, the bulk of French speakers
now live in Africa. A 2007 report published by La Francophonie
estimated that some 115 million Africans spoke French as either
their first or second language. Statistics as to the actual
number of native speakers are impossible to verify, with
estimates ranging from 70 million to over 100 million. How many
non-native speakers there are is anybody's guess, but what is
certain is that French is still a leading international
language.
The only cloud on the horizon, from a purist's perspective,
is the growing influence of English both as a usurper of
French's traditional role as a lingua Franca and through its
"contamination" of the perceived purity of the French language.
It has, however, been argued that this view is slightly myopic
and ignores the influence that French has had on English.
French-speakers are now borrowing from English in the same way
as English speakers borrowed from French in the past. In fact,
estimates of the number of words of French origin in the
English language range from between one third and two thirds
depending on who you believe. Compared to this, French is
estimated to have borrowed 3-4% of words from English, although
admittedly most of these are recent borrowings and the trend
can be expected to continue. It is however, a natural process
and languages should not be viewed as stone edifices but rather
as sea-like constructs that are constantly in motion.
Author Resource:-> Stranslations offers
professional language
translation services in English, French, Spanish, German
and other major European languages.
The original version of this article can found at
www.stranslations.com.
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