n.
The French language from the 9th to the early 16th century.
| Dictionary: Old French |
The French language from the 9th to the early 16th century.
| WordNet: Old French |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
the earliest form of the French language; 9th to 15th century
| Wikipedia: Old French |
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| Old French | ||
|---|---|---|
| Spoken in | northern France, parts of Belgium and Switzerland | |
| Language extinction | evolved into Middle French by the 14th century | |
| Language family | Indo-European
|
|
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1 | None | |
| ISO 639-2 | fro | |
| ISO 639-3 | fro | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
Old French was the Romance dialect continuum spoken in territories which span roughly the northern half of modern France and parts of modern Belgium and Switzerland from around 900 to 1300. It was then known as the langue d'oïl (oïl language) to distinguish it from the langue d'oc (Occitan language, also then called Provençal), whose territory bordered that of Old French to the south.
Contents |
Gaulish, one of the survivors of the continental Celtic languages in Roman times, slowly became extinct during the long centuries of Roman dominion. Only a handful of Gaulish words survive in modern French, for example chêne, ‘oak tree’ and charrue ‘plough'. Fewer than two hundred words in modern French have Gaulish etymology; Delamarre (2003, pp.389-90) lists 167. Due to the expansion of the Roman Empire, Latin began to be spoken more often, explaining the limited influence and longevity of Gaulish.
In one sense, Old French began when the Roman Empire conquered Gaul during the campaigns of Julius Caesar, which were almost complete by 51 BC. The Romans introduced Latin to southern France from around 120 BC (during the Punic Wars) when it came under Roman occupation.
Beginning with Plautus's time, the phonological structure of classical Latin underwent change, which would eventually yield vulgar Latin, the common spoken language of the western Roman empire. This latter form differed strongly from its classical counterpart in phonology; and was the ancestor of the Romance languages, including Old French. Some Gaulish words influenced Vulgar Latin and, through this, other Romance languages. For example, classical Latin equus was replaced in common parlance by vulgar Latin caballus, derived from Gaulish caballos (Delamare 2003 p.96), giving Modern French cheval, Catalan cavall, Occitan caval (chaval), Italian cavallo, Portuguese cavalo, Spanish caballo, Romanian cal, and (borrowed from Norman) English cavalry.
The Old Frankish language had a large influence on the vocabulary of Old French after the conquest, by the Germanic tribe of the Franks, of the portions of Roman Gaul that are now France and Belgium during the Migration Period. The name Français is derived from the name of this tribe. A number of other Germanic peoples, including the Burgundians and the Visigoths, were active in the territory at that time; the Germanic languages spoken by the Franks, Burgundians, and others were not written languages, and at this remove it is often difficult to identify from which specific Germanic source a given Germanic word in French is derived. Philologists such as Pope (1934) estimate that perhaps fifteen percent of the vocabulary of modern French derives from Germanic sources, including a large number of common words like haïr ‘to hate’, bateau ‘boat’, and hache ‘axe’. It has been suggested that the passé composé and other compound verbs used in French conjugation are also the result of Germanic influences.[citation needed]
Other Germanic words in Old French appeared as a result of Norman settlements in Normandy during the 10th century. The settlers spoke Old Norse; and their settlement was legitimised and made permanent in 911 under Rollo of Normandy. A few seafaring terms, notably the four points of the compass, were also borrowed via the Normans from Old English.
While the earliest documents said to be written in French after the Reichenau and Kassel glosses (8th cent.& 9th cent.) are the Oaths of Strasbourg (treaties and charters into which King Charles the Bald entered in 842), it is probable that the text represents an older Langue d'oïl or Gallo-Romance, a transitional stage between Vulgar Latin and early Romance:
The Royal House of Capet, founded by Hugh Capet in 987, inaugurated the development of northern French culture, which slowly but firmly asserted its ascendency over the more southerly areas of Aquitaine and Tolosa (Toulouse). The Capetians' Langue d'oïl, the forerunner of modern standard French, did not begin to become the common speech of the entire nation of France, however, until after the French Revolution.
Another example of an early Langue d'oïl or Gallo-Romance text is the Eulalia sequence, which is probably much closer to the spoken language of the time than the Oaths of Strasbourg (based upon language differences). It is difficult to determine precisely how these extant Old French texts were pronounced.
Old French was constantly changing and evolving. However, it's sometimes useful to consider a "standard" form of the language in the state it was in around the late twelfth century (as attested in a great deal of mostly poetic writings). The phonological system can be summarised as follows:[1]
| Bilabial | Labio- dental |
Dental/ Alveolar |
Postalveolar/ palatal |
Velar | Glottal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m | n | ɲ | |||
| Plosive | p b | t d | k ɡ | |||
| Fricative | f v | s z | (h) | |||
| Affricate | ts dz | tʃ dʒ | ||||
| Lateral | l | ʎ | ||||
| Trill | r |
| Front | Central | Back | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Close | oral | i y | u | |
| nasal | ĩ ỹ | |||
| Close-mid | oral | e | ə | |
| nasal | ẽ | õ | ||
| Open-mid | ɛ | ɔ | ||
| Open | oral | a | ||
| nasal | ã | |||
These have all disappeared in modern French.
| IPA | Example | Meaning | |
|---|---|---|---|
| f a l l i n g | |||
| Oral | /au/ | chevaus | horse |
| /oi/ | toit | roof | |
| /ou/ | |||
| /øu/ | neveu | nephew | |
| Nasal | /ẽi/ | plein | full |
| /õi/ | |||
| r i s i n g | |||
| Oral | /ie/ | pié | foot |
| /yi/ | fruit | fruit | |
| /uø/ | cuer | heart | |
| Nasal | /iẽ/ | bien | well |
| /uẽ/ | |||
| /yĩ/ | |||
| t r i p h t h o n g s stress always falls on middle vowel |
|||
| Oral | /eau/ | beaus | beautiful |
| /ieu/ | |||
| /ueu/ | |||
Old French maintained a two-case system, with a nominative case and an oblique case, longer than some other Romance languages (e.g. Spanish and Italian). Case distinctions, at least in the masculine gender, were marked on both the definite article and on the noun itself. Thus, the masculine noun li voisins, "the neighbour" (Latin VICÍNU(S) /wi'ki:nus/ > Proto-Romance */vetsinu(s)/ > OF voisins /voizins/; Modern French le voisin) was declined as follows:
Singular:
Nominative: li voisins (Latin ille vicinus) Oblique: le voisin (Latin illum vicinum)
Plural:
Nominative: li voisin (Latin illi vicini) Oblique: les voisins (Latin illos vicinos)
In later Old French, these distinctions became moribund. When the distinctions were marked enough, sometimes both forms survived, with a lexical difference: both li sire (nominative, Latin SENIOR) and le seigneur (oblique, Latin SENIORE(M)) survive in the vocabulary of later French as different ways to refer to a feudal lord. As in most other Romance languages, it was the oblique case form that usually survived to become the modern French form: l'enfant (the child) represents the old accusative; the OF nominative was li enfes. But some modern French nouns perpetuate the old nominative; modern French soeur (OF suer) represents the Latin nominative SÓROR; the OF oblique form seror, from Latin accusative SORÓREM, no longer survives. Many personal names preserve the old nominative as well, as indicated by their final -s, such as Charles, Georges, Gilles, Jacques, and Jules.
As in Spanish and Italian, the neuter gender was eliminated, and old neuter nouns became masculine. Some Latin neuter plurals were re-analysed as feminine singulars, though; for example, Latin GAUDIU(M) was more widely used in the plural form GAUDIA, which was taken for a singular in Vulgar Latin, and ultimately led to modern French la joie, "joy" (feminine singular).
Nouns were declined in the following declensions:
Class I is derived from the Latin first declension. Class II is derived from the Latin second declension. Class Ia mostly comes from feminine third-declension nouns in Latin. Class IIa generally stems from second-declension nouns ending in -er and from third-declension masculine nouns; note that in both cases, the Latin nominative singular did not end in -s, and this is preserved in Old French.
Class III nouns show a separate form in the nominative singular that does not occur in any of the other forms. IIIa nouns ended in -ÁTOR, -ATÓREM in Latin, and preserve the stress shift; IIIb nouns likewise had a stress shift from -O to -ÓNEM. IIIc nouns are an Old French creation and have no clear Latin antecedent. IIId nouns represent various other types of third-declension Latin nouns with stress shift or irregular masculine singular (SÓROR, SORÓREM; ÍNFANS, INFÁNTEM; PRÉSBYTER, PRESBÝTEREM; SÉNIOR, SENIÓREM; CÓMES, CÓMITEM).
The verb in Old French was somewhat less distinct from the rest of Proto-Romance than the noun was. It shared in the loss of the Latin passive voice, and the reduction of the Latin futures of the AMABO type (I will love) to Proto-Romance *amare habeo (lit. "I have to love"), which became amerai in Old French.
In Latin, certain verbs shifted the accented syllable based on the Latin accentual system, which depended on vowel length. Thus, the Latin verb ÁMO, "I love," stressed on the first syllable, changed to AMÁMUS, "we love". Because the Latin stressed syllable affected Old French vowels, this syllable shift created a large number of strong verbs in Old French. ÁMO yielded j'aim, while AMÁMUS, moving the stress away from the first syllable, yielded nous amons. There were at least 11 types of alternations; examples of these various types are j'aim, nous amons; j'achat, nous achetons; j'adois, nous adesons; je mein, nouns menons; j'achief, nous achevons; je conchi, nous concheons; je pris, nous proisons; je demeur, nous demourons; je muer, nous mourons; j'aprui, nous aproions. In Modern French almost all of these verbs have been leveled, generally with the "weak" (unstressed) form predominating (but modern aimer/nous aimons is an exception). A few alternations remain, however, in what are now known as irregular verbs, such as je tiens, nous tenons or je meurs, nous mourons.
In general, Old French verbs show much less analogical reformation than in Modern French. The Old French first singular aim, for example, comes directly from Latin AMO, while modern aime has an analogical -e added. The subjunctive forms j'aim, tu ains, il aint are direct preservations of Latin AMEM, AMES, AMET, while the modern forms j'aime, tu aimes, il aime have been completely reformed on the basis of verbs in the other conjugations. The simple past also shows extensive analogical reformation and simplification in Modern French as compared with Old French.
The Latin pluperfect was preserved in very early Old French as a past tense with a value similar to a preterite or imperfect. E.g. (Cantilène de sainte Eulalie, 878 AD) 'avret' < HABUERAT, 'voldret' < VOLUERAT (Old Occitan also preserved this tense, with a conditional value).
| Indicative | Subjunctive | Conditional | Imperative | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present | Simple Past | Imperfect | Future | Present | Imperfect | Present |
Present |
|
| je | dur | durai | duroie | durerai | dur | durasse | dureroie | |
| tu | dures | duras | durois | dureras | durs | durasses | durerois | dure |
| il | dure | dura | duroit | durera | durt | durast | dureroit | |
| nous | durons | durames | duriiens/-ïons | durerons | durons | durissons/-issiens | dureriions/-ïons | durons |
| vous | durez | durastes | duriiez | dureroiz/-ez | durez | durissoiz/-issez/-issiez | dureriiez/-ïez | durez |
| ils | durent | durerent | duroient | dureront | durent | durassent | dureroient | |
Non-finite forms:
Auxiliary verb: avoir
| Indicative | Subjunctive | Conditional | Imperative | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present | Simple Past | Imperfect | Future | Present | Imperfect | Present |
Present |
|
| je | fenis | feni | fenissoie | fenirai | fenisse | fenisse | feniroie | |
| tu | fenis | fenis | fenissoies | feniras | fenisses | fenisses | fenirois | fenis |
| il | fenist | feni(t) | fenissoit | fenira | fenisse(t) | fenist | feniroit | |
| nous | fenissons | fenimes | fenissiiens | fenirons | fenissons | feniss-ons/-iens | feniriiens | fenissons |
| vous | fenissez | fenistes | fenissiiez | fenir-oiz/-ez | fenissez | feniss-oiz/-ez/-iez | feniriiez | fenissez |
| ils | fenissent | fenirent | fenissoient | feniront | fenissent | fenissent | feniroient | |
Non-finite forms:
Auxiliary verb: avoir
| Indicative | Subjunctive | Conditional | Imperative | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present | Simple Past | Imperfect | Future | Present | Imperfect | Present |
Present |
|
| je | cor | corui | coroie | corrai | core | corusse | corroie | |
| tu | cors | corus | coroies | corras | cores | corusses | corroies | cor |
| il | cort | coru(t) | coroit | corra | core(t) | corust | corroit | |
| nous | corons | corumes | coriiens | corrons | corons | coruss-ons/-iens | corriiens | corons |
| vous | corez | corustes | coriiez | corr-oiz/-ez | corez | coruss-oiz/-ez/-iez | corriiez | corez |
| ils | corent | corurent | coroient | corront | corent | corussent | corroient | |
Non-finite forms:
Auxiliary verb: estre
| Indicative | Subjunctive | Conditional | Imperative | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present | Simple Past | Imperfect | Future | Present | Imperfect | Present |
Present |
|
| je | ai | eus | avoie | aurai | ai | eusse | auroie | |
| tu | ais (later as) | eus | avois | auras | ais | eusses | aurois | ave |
| il | ai (later a) | eut | avoit | aura | ai | eusst | auroit | |
| nous | avons | eumes | aviens/-ïons | aurons | aions | eussons/-issiens | auravons/-ïons | avons |
| vous | avez | eustes | aviez | auroiz/-ez | aiez | eussoiz/-issez/-issiez | auravez/-ïez | avez |
| ils | ont | eurent | avoient | auront | ont | eussent | auroient | |
Non-finite forms:
Auxiliary verb: avoir
| Indicative | Subjunctive | Conditional | Imperative | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present | Simple Past | Imperfect | Future | Present | Imperfect | Present |
Present |
|
| je | suis | fui | (i)ere ; esteie > estoie | (i)er; serai; estrai | seie > soie | fusse | soi | sereie > seroie; estreie > estroie |
| tu | es, ies | fus | (i)eres ; esteies > estoies | (i)ers; seras; estras | seies > soies | fusses | sereies > seroies; estreies > estroies | seies > soies |
| il | est | fu(t) | (i)ere(t), (i)ert ; esteit > estoit | (i)ert; sera(t); estra(t) | seit > soit | fust | sereit > seroit; estreit > estroit | |
| nous | somes, esmes | fumes | eriiens, erions ; estiiens, estions | (i)ermes; serons; estrons | seiiens, seions > soiiens, soions | fuss-ons/-iens | seriiens, serions; estriiens, estrions | seiiens > soiiens, seions > soions |
| vous | estes | fustes | eriiez ; estiiez | --; sere(i)z; estre(i)z | seiiez > soiiez | fuss-eiz/-ez/-iez | seriiez; estriiez | seiiez > soiiez |
| ils | sont | furent | (i)erent ; esteient > estoient | (i)erent; seront; estront | seient > soient | fussent | sereient > seroient; estreient > estroient | |
Non-finite forms:
auxiliary verb: avoir (?)
Since Old French did not consist of a single standard, competing administrative varieties were propagated by the provincial courts and chanceries.
The French of Paris was one of a number of standards, including:
This Oïl language is the ancestor of several languages spoken today, including:
Main Article at Medieval French literature
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