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French translations
If you are looking for a translator from French or into
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Some facts about French language
French language, member of the Romance group of the Italic
subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. It is
spoken as a first language by more than 70 million people,
chiefly in France (55 million speakers), Belgium (3 million),
Switzerland (1.5 million), former French and Belgian colonies
in Africa (5 million), and Canada (6.5 million). French probably
ranks next after English as a second tongue. Having served
as an international language in diplomacy and commerce as
well as among educated people during the last few centuries,
it still enjoys great prestige culturally and is one of the
languages used officially by the United Nations.
History of French
French is descended from Vulgar Latin, the vernacular
Latin (as distinguished from literary Latin) of the Roman
Empire. When ancient Gaul (now modern France) was conquered
by the Romans in the 2d and 1st cent. B.C., its inhabitants
spoke Gaulish, a Celtic language, which was rapidly supplanted
by the Latin of the Roman overlords. In the 5th cent. A.D.
the Franks, a group of Germanic tribes, began their invasion
of Gaul, but they too were Romanized. Although modern French
thus inherited several hundred words of Celtic origin and
several hundred more from Germanic, it owes its structure
and the greater part of its vocabulary to Latin.
By the 9th cent. the language spoken in what is now France
was sufficiently different from Latin to be a distinct language.
It is called Old French and was current from the 9th to the
13th cent. The earliest extant text in Old French is the Oaths
of Strasbourg, dated 842. Of the various dialects of Old French,
Francien (the north-central dialect spoken in Paris and the
region around it) in time became the standard form of the
language because of the increasing political and cultural
importance of Paris. French from the 14th through the 16th
cent. is known as Middle French. During this period many words
and expressions were borrowed from Latin, Greek, and Italian,
and a group of French poets, the Pleiade (see under Pleiad),
encouraged the French to develop and improve their language
and literature.
The modern period of French began in the 17th cent. In 1635
the French Academy was founded by Cardinal Richelieu to maintain
the purity of the language and its literature and to serve
as the ultimate judge of approved usage. While the vocabulary
and style of Modern French have been influenced by movements
such as romanticism and realism, structurally French has changed
comparatively little since the Middle French period. Standardization
of the French language has been aided in modern times by more
widespread education and by the mass media.
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