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  1. Lenguas de oïl. Las lenguas de oíl (en francés langues d'oïl ) son una familia de lenguas romances originadas en territorios de la actual Francia septentrional, parte de Bélgica, Suiza y las islas Anglonormandas del canal de la Mancha. Las lenguas de oil son un continuo de dialectos que incluyen el francés estándar y sus lenguas ...

    • sin datos, Nativos-, Otros-
  2. Langue d'oïl (in the singular), Oïl dialects and Oïl languages (in the plural) designate the ancient northern Gallo-Romance languages as well as their modern-day descendants. They share many linguistic features, a prominent one being the word oïl for yes. ( Oc was and still is the southern word for yes, hence the langue d'oc or Occitan ...

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  4. La langue d'oïl comprend l'ancien français populaire de Paris du XVIIe siècle, qui est l'ancêtre du français d'Europe et du français d'Amérique (sauf en ce qui concerne le français acadien, voir plus bas 14 et le wallon du Wisconsin ).

    • Macro-langue
  5. Poem in Burgundian by Aymé Piron (1640–1727) The Burgundian language, also known by French names Bourguignon-morvandiau, Bourguignon, and Morvandiau, is an Oïl language spoken in Burgundy and particularly in the Morvan area of the region. The arrival of the Burgundians brought Germanic elements into the Gallo-Romance speech of the inhabitants.

    • (50,000 have some knowledge of the language cited 1988), 20,000 (2022)
    • Burgundy
  6. Langue d'oc or Occitan language. Langue d'oïl (in the singular), Oïl dialects and Oïl languages (in the plural) refer to all the ancient northern Gallo-Romance languages as well as their modern-day descendants. The most widely spoken modern Oïl language is French, but others include Norman, Walloon, Picard, Gallo, Poitevin-Saintongeais, and ...

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  7. The langue d’oïl had a tradition of dance and spinning songs before the troubadours exerted by the mid-12th century an influence encouraged by, among others, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Guilhelm IX’s granddaughter and queen of France and later England (as the wife of Henry II). The troubadours’…. The langue d’oïl (forerunner of modern ...

  8. May 11, 2024 · Search for: 'langue d'oïl' in Oxford Reference ». The language of the north of France during the medieval period, so called to distinguish it from the langue d'oc (see Provençal), the distinction being based on the particle of affirmation: late Latin ‘hoc ille’ for ‘yes’ became ‘o'ïl’ in the North and ‘oc’ in the South. The ...

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