Meridional French

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Meridional French
français méridional
Native toOccitania
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone

Meridional French (French: français méridional), also referred to as Francitan, is a regional variant of the French language. It is widely spoken in Marseille, Avignon and Toulouse and is influenced by the Occitan language.

There are speakers of Meridional French in all generations, but the accent is most marked among the elderly, who often speak Occitan as their first language.

Characteristics[]

The phonology, morphology, syntax and lexicon of Occitan have all influenced Meridional French, but the phonological effects are perhaps the most salient by producing the characteristic accent, which is used by speakers of Meridional French. Those effects include the following:

  • The loss of phonemic nasal vowels, which are replaced by an oral vowel followed by a nasal consonant
  • the frequent realisation of the final atonal vowels of Latin, which are lost by speakers of other varieties of French, as schwa
  • the presence of lexical stress on the penultimate syllable of many words, in contrast to the phrase-final stress of Standard French

Meridional French is also subject to a phonological law known as the Law of Position in which mid-vowels are subject to allophonic variation based on the shape of their syllables; they are realised as mid-open in closed syllables (those ending in a consonant) and as mid-close in open syllables (those ending in a vowel). The phenomenon has been shown to be somewhat more complex, however, by Durand (1995), Eychenne (2006), and Chabot (2008). The principle is strictly adhered to by speakers of Meridional French, in contrast to those of other varieties of French.

Phonology[]

  • Lexical (or word-based) stress is used, unlike the prosodic stress of Standard French.
  • Nasal vowels have not changed but are still pronounced as in traditional Parisian French or with a nasal consonant after the vowel: enfant [ɑ̃(ŋ)ˈfɑ̃(ŋ)], pain [pɛ̃(ŋ)], timbre [ˈtɛ̃(m)bʁ(ə)], bon [bɔ̃(ŋ)] and brun [bʁœ̃(ŋ)].
  • The "e caduc" is always pronounced by older speakers, even at the end of words. For example, cerise (cherry) is pronounced [səˈʁiːzə], tête (head) is pronounced [ˈtɛːtə], and it is sometimes pronounced even if there is no e; ciel (sky) [ˈsjɛlə].
  • /o/, /ø/, /e/ merges with /ɔ/,/œ/,/ɛ/, the resulting phonemes being pronounced open-mid in stressed syllables (unless word-final, where they are close-mid) and close-mid in unstressed syllables (except before /ʁC/ clusters, where they are open-mid).[1] As a result, both notre and nôtre are pronounced as [ˈnɔtʁə] and both jeune and jeûne are as [ˈʒœnə].

Vocabulary[]

A number of words are peculiar to Meridional French. For example, péguer (Occitan pegar), "to be sticky" (Standard French poisser), chocolatine (Southwest), "pain au chocolat", cagade (Occitan cagat) or flûte (a larger baguette), known as a pain parisien (Parisian loaf) in Paris.

Some phrases are used with meanings that differ from those of Standard French. For example, s'il faut, literally meaning "if necessary", is used to mean "perhaps", which would be rendered in Standard French as peut-être. That is a calque of the Occitan se cal.

References[]

  1. ^ occitanet.free.fr http://occitanet.free.fr/tolosan/tolosan.htm. Retrieved 2021-03-23. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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