Chaucer would have been addressed both in Latin and French while at home in England. His churchmen would speak Latin and his lawful superiors, the Normans, would, of course, speak French. What made Chaucer a remarkable author was that he, first, wrote in the language of his fellow commoners, English.
Oliver is a Latin name. Latin is what English origins from. So, Oliver is not a French name.
Geoffrey Chaucer's mother was Agnes Copton. There is a good chance that Chaucer grew up bilingual (French / English). The main language of administration was in the process of shifting from Norman French to English in Chaucer's own lifetime, and this may be a main reason why there is so much French influence in Chaucer's own writing.
Life was very hard when Chaucer was alive but at that time they spoke the old English language. When Chaucer was alive Charles Dickens was also alive. Chaucer name was french and Latin and he lived a life with his dad as a wine merchant and i am not so sure about his mother but i think that his mother must of died somehow i am not sure and i am not sure Chaucer and Dickens did not live at the same time. Chaucer was born c. 1343 and died in 1400. Charles Dickens was not born until 1812 and he died in 1870.
"James" and "Jacob" are the English equivalents of the French name Jacques.Specifically, the French name is a masculine proper noun. Both the French and the English first names trace their origins back to the Latin Iacobus, the Greek Ἰακώβος, and the original Hebrew יַעֲקֹב. The pronunciation of the French name is "zhahk"
Italian, French, English. Spanish
"Hilaire" is a French equivalent of the English name "Hillary."Specifically, the French and the English names trace their origins back to the Latin adjective "hilarius." The original meaning therefore is "cheerful." The pronunciation is "ee-lehr."
Béatrice is a French equivalent of the English name "Beatrix." The feminine proper name traces its origins back to the Latin beatricem for "she who makes happy." The pronunciation will be "bey-a-treess" in French.
answer from ancestry.comTardiff/Tardif English and French (Channel Islands): nickname for a sluggish person, from Middle English, Old French tardif 'slow' (Late Latin tardivus, for classical Latin tardus).
French is one of the Romance languages that descended from the Latin language. The Italian, English, and Spanish languages all have roots in the Latin language.
The name "Laura" has the same meaning in French as it does in English. It is derived from the Latin word "laurus," meaning "laurel tree" or "crown."
The name Celeste is from the Latin caelestis (heavens), and comes to English use from the French (Céleste).
French, Spanish, Italian, Greek, and English