What Is Occitan and Why Is It Endangered? | FluentU French Blog (2024)

What Is Occitan and Why Is It Endangered? | FluentU French Blog (1)

By Mose Hayward Last updated:

Did you know there’s a whole side of French you may have never known existed?

In fact, knowing the origins of words can be a very memorable way to learn, and there are more to some French words than meets the eye.

Enter Occitan, a language of Southern France whose influence pops up all over standard French.

But what is Occitan, who speaks it and how exactly has it impacted the French language?

Contents

  • What Is Occitan?
  • Who Speaks Occitan?
  • Why is Occitan Endangered?
  • What Languages Are Similar to Occitan?
  • Can French Speakers Understand Occitan?
  • How Occitan Is Related to Modern French
    • 1. Amour and other -our and -eur words
    • 2. Food vocabulary
    • 3.Animal names
    • 4. Other vocabulary
  • Resources for Learning About Occitan and French
  • And one more thing...

Download: This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you can take anywhere. Click here to get a copy. (Download)

What Is Occitan?

Occitan is a Romance language that hails mainly from Southern France, with some small outposts in what’s now Italy and Spain. It’s sometimes referred to in French as langued’oc, and you could think of it as a “family” of dialects including Provençal, Languedocien, Gascon, Auvergnat, Limousin and Vivaro-Alpin.

Although it was the main literary language in France back in the Middle Ages, UNESCO now considers all of Occitan’s major dialects as endangered.

Who Speaks Occitan?

Occitan is still spoken in places like Monaco, Val d’Aran in Catalonia, the Occitan Valleys in Italy and areas of Southern France.

If you want a chance to speak Occitan, you have to really go looking for it. Most people in Occitania (that is, the Occitan lands) don’t speak it anymore. Today, Occitan is mostly spoken at home or casually, and those who do tend to be very old or young activists hoping to save the language as it makes its last gasps.

Currently, there’s an attempt being made at a revival, with festivals, singing clubs and classes available at some universities.

Why is Occitan Endangered?

Occitan was the main language in Southern France many centuries back, during the time of the troubadours. Eventually, French was declared the official language of France, and speaking other languages was heavily discouraged or even forbidden. For example, at some point, people weren’t allowed to speak Occitan at school, and they couldn’t even use it for official documents.

But even if Occitan does die out, the language will at least be remembered through its influence on French. Since French and Occitan were neighbors for centuries, there were lots of opportunities for this crossover to take place.

As with America’s Spanglish, there’s now a crossbreed of the two that’s called Francitan. And as I’ve previously documented for this blog, there’s a lot of regional slang in Toulouse that’s taken from Occitan. You’ll soon start to see all the various areas of overlap and origin here.

However, keep in mind that some etymologies are still being debated among linguists. There are plenty of discussions to be had on this fascinating topic, but there’s no doubt of its linguistic importance!

What Languages Are Similar to Occitan?

Occitan has similarities with other Romance languages like French, Spanish and Italian. Here’s what one dialect of it (Aranese) sounds like:

The language that’s the closest to Occitan would be Catalan. Some linguists even debate that Catalan and Occitan are actually the same language.

As a Catalan speaker, I’ve been able to hold conversations with Occitan speakers without any problems. If you know Catalan, it’s also possible to watch the news in Occitan and understand most of what’s being said.

Can French Speakers Understand Occitan?

While French and Occitan share some historical and linguistic ties, mutual intelligibility between them can vary. Occitan is a distinct language with its own phonetic, grammatical, and lexical features, which would make it challenging for those who only speak French to fully understand without having specifically studied Occitan, or having been otherwise exposed to it. Mutual intelligibility can vary depending on the specific dialect.

Modern communication and cultural exchange have somewhat increased awareness of Occitan among French speakers, but fluency in one does not guarantee that you’d be able to understand the other.

How Occitan Is Related to Modern French

Despite the differences in the two languages, there are elements of modern French that are rooted in Occitan. The following are all important parts of modern standard French. The origins may be region-specific, but you can use the vocabulary that you’ll learn in this post anywhere in the French-speaking world:

1. Amour and other -our and -eur words

The word amour (love) seems so quintessentially French, doesn’t it?

Fromthe perspective ofAnglophones struggling to learn French in France, that secondvowel is fiendishly tricky to achieve, as is the emotion itself. But amour is an Occitan import.

Occitan troubadours once traveled through France singing about amor.

But the Latin students out there might be saying, “how do we know thatamour was borrowed from Occitan, and not taken directly from the Latin amore?”

The answer is that French (in its Picardy dialect) already did have its version of the Latin word,ameur. The fact that modern French usesamourinstead ofameur shows that the Occitan version of the word won out.

We thus know that the words fleur (flower), douleur (pain) and chaleur (heat) followed a similar path through Occitan before being borrowed by French, also due to their vowel sounds. The original Occitan words wereflor,dolorandcalor.

For those who study other romance languages, you’ll notice regular, easy variations from Italian, Spanish, Catalan or Portuguese with these French words.

2. Food vocabulary

Southern France is famous for its gourmandise (love of good food, gluttony), so it makes sense that some of its food vocabulary would make its way from Occitan into standard French.

  • The Occitan caçòla (pan) gave French the words cassoulet(the diminutive form of the Occitan word, used to describe a typically Southwestern French slow-cooked meat stew) and casserole (a pan, a stew or casserole that’s cooked in it).
  • Bouillabaisse is the French name of a fish stew from Marseille. This French name forit comes from the Provençal words bolhir (to boil) andabaissar(to simmer). In French, those words arebouillir andmijoter.
  • Also from the sea is the French dishbrandade, which is an emulsified mixture of salt cod and olive oil.Brandadain Occitan is a mixture. You can use the rarewordbranlement (mixture) in French, though it may produce snickers—se branleris very common slang for “to screw around, doing nothing” and has some sexual undertones.Mélange is the more common French term for “mixture.”
  • Aïoli, atreasured condimentfrom the Southwest known throughout France, comesfrom the Provençal alh (garlic,ail in French) and oli (oil,huile in French). It’s a garlic mayonnaise that’s now popular all around the globe.
  • You can wash it all down with the Frenchpastis, an anise liquor that’s served mixed with water and then becomes spookily cloudy. The word pastís in Occitan means “mash-up.” It’s popular throughout France, particularly on sunny summer days.
  • For dessert, one can have some Frenchnougat, from the Occitan pannogat (nutty bread). As you likely know, nougatis a chewy confection of roasted nuts, egg whites andsugar or honey.

3.Animal names

The following animals were originally Occitan, and French took on versions of the Occitan names.

I’ll give an Occitan word first, followed by its French translation and then English. You’ll see a certain obvious pattern in how these words became Frenchified:

abelha → abeille (f) — bee

aigla → aigle (m/f) — eagle

cigala → cigale (f) — cicada

faisan → faisan (m)— pheasant

rascassa → rascasse (f) — scorpion fish

daurada → daurade (f)— sea bream

4. Other vocabulary

  • The French word for lawn, pelouse,comes from the Occitan pelosa or peluda, which means hairy or shaggy. It’s a memorable (or disturbing?) image for a lawn, isn’t it?If you want to describe someone as hairy in French, you can use poilue.
  • We don’t have any word for anaubadein English, but in French, it’s a serenade performed at dawn below the windows of one’s true love. It comes from the Occitanaubada and was popularized by troubadours.
  • A badaud(m) is an onlooker or a gawker. This word comes from the Occitanbadar which means “to yawn” (bâiller in French).

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Resources for Learning About Occitan and French

For further adventures into better understanding French—and, of course, improving your vocabulary and retention of it—here’s a useful Occitan-French dictionary.

And, ifyou foundthis exercise useful for memorizing new vocabulary, or if you’re a word nerd planning a wildSaturday night, you can head to thisFrench etymological dictionary.

If you’re curious about learning Occitan, you might be interested in this Youtube channel by Parpalhon Blau:

As a French learner, you might enjoy getting to know Occitan since it’ll expose you to a different aspect of French culture and history.

So have fun trying out some Occitan vocabulary and exploring the resources above!

Download: This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you can take anywhere. Click here to get a copy. (Download)

And one more thing...

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FluentU has a wide variety of great content, like interviews, documentary excerpts and web series, as you can see here:

FluentU brings native French videos with reach. With interactive captions, you can tap on any word to see an image, definition and useful examples.

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Practice and reinforce all the vocabulary you've learned in a given video with learn mode. Swipe left or right to see more examples for the word you’re learning, and play the mini-games found in our dynamic flashcards, like "fill in the blank."

All throughout, FluentU tracks the vocabulary that you’re learning and uses this information to give you a totally personalized experience. It gives you extra practice with difficult words—and reminds you when it’s time to review what you’ve learned.

Start using the FluentU website on your computer or tablet or, better yet, download the FluentU app from the iTunes or Google Play store. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)

What Is Occitan and Why Is It Endangered? | FluentU French Blog (2024)

FAQs

What Is Occitan and Why Is It Endangered? | FluentU French Blog? ›

Why is Occitan Endangered? Occitan was the main language in Southern France many centuries back, during the time of the troubadours. Eventually, French was declared the official language of France, and speaking other languages was heavily discouraged or even forbidden.

Why is Occitan endangered? ›

Occitan's greatest decline occurred during the French Revolution, in which diversity of language was considered a threat.

What is Occitan French? ›

Occitan was spoken in southern France long before modern French arrived. Also called lenga d'òc (or langue d'oc in French), Occitan is a Romance language related to French, Spanish, and especially Catalan.

What happened to the Occitan language? ›

The decline of Occitan can be traced back to the 14th century, with the increasingly hostile view of the French monarchy leading to a gradual, but decisive, imposition of Francien (pre-standardised French) over Occitan and any other language spoken in France at the time.

How is Occitan being preserved? ›

The Partit Occitan was established in 1987 in Toulouse to protect the Occitan language and identity and to campaign on regional issues such as employment and the environment.

What is the endangered language in France? ›

Breton (Brezhoneg) -Breton is an endangered Celtic language spoken in western Brittany by around 225,000 people, many of whom are elderly.

Is Occitan closer to French or Spanish? ›

Occitan's closest language is obviously Catalan. Lots of linguists even consider that Occitan and Catalan are the same language. Occitan is closer to Catalan, Spanish, Portuguese and Italian than French. *The word 'dialect' means here 'linguistic variant of a language'.

Can French people understand Occitan? ›

Occitan is a distinct language with its own phonetic, grammatical, and lexical features, which would make it challenging for those who only speak French to fully understand without having specifically studied Occitan, or having been otherwise exposed to it.

Is Occitan taught in French schools? ›

Occitan in lower secondary education Thirty percent of the schools for lower secondary education offer Occitan as an optional subject only, involving 7,000 children (académies of Bordeaux, Clermont-Ferrand, Montpellier, Nice and Toulouse).

What is special about Occitanie? ›

Occitanie, France's second-largest fruit-growing region, is best-known for stone fruit, including plums, and apples. It has production sites for the nation's leading fruit-processing companies: Florette, Andros, St Mamet, and more.

What does l'Occitane mean in French? ›

L'OCCITANE means "the woman from Occitania". Occitania is the name of the ancient geographic area in southern France, spanning from northeastern Spain to northwestern Italy. Information.

How do you say yes in Occitan? ›

Occitan took a different path from Latin to the main official languages. It is sometimes called lenga d'òc ("language of oc", French: langue d'oc) because its word for yes is òc, as opposed to oil (oui) or sì in other languages. That is one way to classify Romance languages.

Why is it called l'Occitane? ›

The name L'OCCITANE referred to Occitanie, the ancient province that once stretched across the south of France from East to West. Occitanie was a welcoming, tolerant society where women and nature played leading roles. L'OCCITANE literally means, in the old language of Oc, “The woman from Occitanie”.

Why does Occitania want independence? ›

Occitan nationalism emerges as a sense of grievance of the southern regions of France caused by the economic and energy restructuring undertaken by the Gaullists during the 1960s, which would have given priority to the more prosperous northern regions.

Is Occitan being revived? ›

Occitan is a Romance language spoken in Southern France and parts of Italy, Catalonia, and Monaco. The Occitan context in Southern France represents one of the earliest cases of language revitalization in Europe, with ongoing literary and language movements since the sixteenth century.

Is Occitan an ethnicity? ›

The Occitans (Occitan: occitans) are a Romance-speaking ethnic group originating in the historical region of Occitania (southern France, northeastern Spain, and northwestern Italy and Monaco).

What is the most endangered language? ›

Votish. Also known as Vod, Votic, Votian and Vote, this language has just eight remaining speakers. With speaker numbers dropping from 68 ten years ago, the future of Votish seems bleak indeed.

Why are some indigenous languages becoming endangered? ›

The threat is the direct consequence of colonialism and colonial practices that resulted in the decimation of indigenous peoples, their cultures and languages. Through policies of assimilation, dispossession of lands, discriminatory laws and actions, indigenous languages in all regions face the threat of extinction.

Why are indigenous languages disappearing in Latin America? ›

Kakan, an indigenous language of the Diaguita people, has largely become extinct in Latin America. Research suggests the reasons for its decline are multifaceted, from the process of regional colonisation and the formation of Latin American nation-states.

Why is Walloon an endangered language? ›

Walloon is classified as "definitely endangered" by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger. Despite its rich literature, beginning anonymously in the 16th century and with well-known authors since 1756, the use of Walloon has decreased markedly since France's annexation of Wallonia in 1794.

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