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Common ancestry of French and Portuguese

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Alas Oscuras
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 Message 1 of 22
15 June 2006 at 8:15pm | IP Logged 
I've been wondering a lot about how French became so different in
sound in comparison to the other romance languages; there's a
great sound affinnity between, let's say, Italian, Castillian, Galician,
etc, but French drifts considerably from that basic pronunciation
pattern. My doubt is if this was caused by the survival of the Celtic
pronunciation, because as I read somewhere, accents are actually the
longest lasting feature of a language. I'm not a linguist, just an
aficionado, but my guess is that the pronunciation, the accent, is
what really ends making a language evolve. For example, Castillian,
Italian and French had a main source: Latin. I'm not sure about the
percentange of features as a direct heritage of Latin in French or
Italian, but I've heard several times that in Castillian there is a 70-
75% of elements directly originated from it. But my opinion is that
the logical reason of the eventual divergence among these
languages was the pre-roman tongue; people were used to speak
and modulate in a special fashion, and even when they adopted a
different language from their old one, the way of producing the
sounds lingered, and in time, after centuries, created different
languages. Accents are the most lasting linguistical features. So,
French sounds very differently, as I said, but I noted similarities in it
with other languages: Portuguese and German. In the case of
German, I don't speak it, but to me it sounds a lot with "closed"
vowels, short ones, and a lot of "consonantation", and I think French
shares to certain degree these poorly explained features. I'd say it
shouldn't be surprise to find similarities between German and French
as they're neighbors, but what haunts is actually the Portuguese: It
has, phonetically, a lot of coincidences with French! It's soft sounds,
something about its rythm......the general phonetic scheme. I'm not
sure, I've done research but haven't found a good answer, but, didn't
the Celtic culture kept more its original form in the west and
northwest of the Iberian peninsula? Galicia is clearly Celtic, but I'm
not sure if Portugal was such an intense Celtic culture. Anyway, a
proof of sharing among Galicia and Portugal is the language; wasn't
Galican originally completely mingled with old Portuguese? Actually
the same thing? That would state a strong cultural relationship,
aiming to the Celtic presence in Portugal. Does anyone knows
something about this!? I'd love to know if continental Celtic
originated the hypthetically underlaying common sound of French
and Portuguese. I guess it's a very specifical and difficult wondering,
but with God's bless maybe someone has had certain experience in
this theme, heh.
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Captain Haddock
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 Message 2 of 22
15 June 2006 at 10:49pm | IP Logged 
Since nothing other than Latin was written in those countries back then,
it's mostly guesswork as to what and how people were speaking.

I suspect that the majority of people living throughout Gaul and Iberia
never thoroughly learned proper Latin like they spoke in Rome. Perhaps a
diglossia of vulgar Latin and Gallic-accented broken Latin was spoken in
France, for example.

At any rate, it appears French began to evolve in the third century as
Germanic tribes like the Franks settled in Gaul and mixed their own
language in with the spoken Latin.

Something similar happened in Portugal, but it was the Suevi and Visigoth
tribes who ended up influencing Portuguese Latin. Portuguese was also
influenced by Arabic during Iberia's period of Moorish rule.

Edited by Captain Haddock on 15 June 2006 at 10:49pm

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Alas Oscuras
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 Message 3 of 22
16 June 2006 at 12:12am | IP Logged 
Oh yes, I didn't remember the Franks were Germanic. Well, that
would explain the similarity I hear between French and German, but I
don't think that would explain everything, or that it discards a mayor
Celtic influence, because Gaul was populated since long by Celtic
tribes.
As for the influence posterior to Latin in Iberia, the Suevi and
Visigoths surely had an influence, but was their dominion so long
and deep to reconfigure the accent of the people settled in today
Portugal? It's very difficult to actually change a language from its
roots. I still ignore who lived in Portugal before the Roman era.
There are the Lusitan, for example, but it's still foggy. What haunts
me about this, is to have a glimpse at the sound of ancient Celtic in
French and Portuguese, I think it's worth a bit of thinking. Well, and
the French is considered chic by many, it would be interesting to
know where that "high rated" language found its sound.
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boaziano
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 Message 4 of 22
16 June 2006 at 2:39am | IP Logged 
What do you mean for "accent"?

Anyway I don't think that, for example, nasalization could be considered as a distinctive celtic mark... we can find this tract almost in every linguistic family.
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sirgregory
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 Message 5 of 22
16 June 2006 at 10:59am | IP Logged 
There are similarities between German and French. The big one I noticed is that they both have that same R sound. I have also come across several cognates such the French fenetre and the German fenster, both meaning window. And that's just with my very little French and practically no German. I'm sure there are many other common features. Historically this can be explained by the presence of Germanic tribes in modern day France.



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Alas Oscuras
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 Message 6 of 22
28 June 2006 at 7:44pm | IP Logged 
I did a bit of research and the Lusitani had a Celtic culture, and
seem to have been a mayor population in today's Portugal territory.
Cantabria, Asturias and Galicia to the north and northwest of Iberia
remained free of the Roman control for the longest time of all
peoples of Iberia, and they seem to have been mainly Celtic, in a
different way than that of the Mediterranean coast, where there were
the Iberians. But so, their culture probably was kept longer,
preserved, and closer to the older forms, and it's worth to notice
that the regions I mentioned above included in those days part of
the actual territory of Portugal. So, it seems more clear that precisely
in the territory where Portuguese developed, a main underlaying
culture was the Celtic, as in Gaul. To the north of Iberia too, where
Castillian developed, though it could have been more mingled, the
culture (and language), with the Mediterranean ones. But it's to
notice that old Castillian resembled more Portuguese, phonetically,
than it does today. A lot of "sh" sounds. So, what I meant for "accent"
was precisely how you speak something, the same language, in a
different way from other zone's people.
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Guanche
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 Message 7 of 22
29 June 2006 at 12:54pm | IP Logged 
Bear in mind that Celtic languages were not the only languages spoken in the Iberian Peninsula when the Romans arrived. There were many other tongues, and lots of them were non-Indoeuropean, just like the Basque language.

Moreover, the Germanic tribes that invaded the Iberian Peninsula at the end of the Roman Empire, like the Suevi and Visigoths, were a minority compared to the Roman population they ruled over, so we have to be careful when talking about language influence.
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Alas Oscuras
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Mexico
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 Message 8 of 22
29 June 2006 at 2:30pm | IP Logged 
Yes, that's true, then as now, a lot of tongues were spoken. But the
point is that in the zone I'm focusing in, the predominant culture
seems to have been Celtic.



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