French Language

From Conservapedia

French (fr Français, or la langue française) is a modern European language, a member of the Romance language family, which like others in this group owes much of its structure to Latin with some influence from the native languages of the pre-Roman Franks. It is the official language France, Belgium (Wallonia and Brussels), Switzerland, Luxembourg, Canada (Quebec Region) and Monaco.

In medieval times, French had evolved into two groups, a northern branch known as the "Langue d'oïl," and a southerly group known as the "Langue d'Oc." However, after the political influence of the southerly group was crushed by the Albigensian Crusade, the northerly variety became dominant, and is the ancestor of modern "standard" French (though the southern variety still exists as the Occitan language). French is also spoken in many former French colonies in West Africa and the Caribbean, the Canadian province of Québec, by some people in Vietnam, in Mauritius, in many Pacific Ocean Islands and in other places. In Tunisia, a former French colony, French is still one of the primary languages spoken. In the US, French is spoken in several communities in northern Maine.[1]

L'Académie française[edit]

Unlike English, French vocabulary and grammatical rules (at least in France) are determined by an official body, l'Académie française (French Academy). The Academy publishes its own dictionary. While the Academy's recommendations have no legal power as such, they are instrumental in shaping the French language.

The Academy is often criticized for being a brake on the development of the language. For example, the last fully completed edition of its dictionary was completed in 1935 while it has yet to complete the next edition. Because of this, common usage dictates, as in English, what words can be used but are then often changed by the Academy later, especially if they are loan words from English.

Grammar[edit]

Pronouns[edit]

Object Pronouns[edit]

French is a predominately SVO with some SOV aspects. For example:

Il mange une pomme à Paris (lit. He eats an apple in Paris)
Il y en mange une (He eats one there; note the change in word order)

Edouard va parler aux professeurs (Edouard is going to talk to the professors)
Edouard va leur parler (lit. Edouard is going them to speak)

Avez-vous vu Richard (lit. Have you seen Richard)
L'avez-vous vu (lit. Him have you seen)

The objects are substituted with object pronouns which are placed before the verb in present tense or before the auxiliary verb.

Verbs[edit]

Regular French verbs come in in three forms, with different conjugations for those ending in -er, -ir, and -re. Examples of such conjugations are listed below.

Pronoun parl-er vend-re fin-ir
Je parl-e vend-s fin-is
Tu Parl-es Vend-s fin-is
Il/Elle/On/Qui parl-e vend fin-it
Nous parl-ons vend-ons fin-issons
Vous parl-ez vend-ez fin-issez
Ils/Elles parl-ent vend-ent fin-issent

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]


Categories: [France] [Romance Languages] [Quebec] [Canadian History] [Canada]


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