Walloon language

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates {{#invoke:Infobox|infobox}}Template:Template otherTemplate:Main other Walloon (Template:IPAc-en; natively {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}; Template:Langx {{#invoke:IPA|main}}) is a Romance language that is spoken in much of Wallonia and, to a very small extent, in Brussels, Belgium; some villages near Givet, northern France; and a clutch of communities in northeastern Wisconsin, United States.<ref name=wisconsin>Université du Wisconsin : collection de documents sur l'immigration wallonne au Wisconsin, enregistrements de témoignages oraux en anglais et wallon, 1976 Template:In lang University of Wisconsin Digital Collection : Belgian-American Research Collection </ref>

It belongs to the langues d'oïl dialect continuum, the most prominent member of which is French. The historical background of its formation was the territorial extension since 980 of the Principality of Liège to the south and west. Walloon is classified as "definitely endangered" by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

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. This period definitively established French as the language of social promotion, far more than it was before.<ref>"It seems the revolutionaries themselves consider the fact French was enough close to the Walloon language so as not to manage Wallonia as Brittany, Corsica, Alsace or Flanders." Template:In lang "{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}" Template:In lang Astrid Von Busekist, Politique des langues et construction de l'État, Éd. Duculot, Gembloux, 1998, pp. 22–28</ref> After World War I, public schools provided French-speaking education to all children, inducing a denigration of Walloon, especially when accompanied by official orders in 1952 to punish its use in schools. Subsequently, since the middle of the 20th century, generational transmission of the language has decreased, resulting in Walloon almost becoming a dead language. Today it is scarcely spoken among younger people, with the vast majority of its native speakers being the elderly (aged 65 and over). In 2007, the number of people with knowledge of the language was estimated at 600,000.<ref name="Tapani Salminen 2007">"Europe and North Asia" (211-282) . Tapani Salminen (2007), C. Moseley · London & New York: Routledge</ref>

Numerous associations, especially theatre companies, are working to keep the language alive. Formally recognized as a {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (regional indigenous language) of Belgium since 1990,<ref>Décret Valmy Féaux, 14 December 1990</ref> Walloon has also benefited from a continued corpus planning process. The "Feller system" (1900) regularized transcription of the different accents. Since the 1990s, a common orthography was established (the Template:Ill), which allowed large-scale publications, such as the Walloon Wikipedia officially in 2003. In 2004, a Walloon translation of a Tintin comic was released under the name L'èmerôde d'al Castafiore; in 2007 an album consisting of Gaston Lagaffe comic strips was published in Walloon.

Walloon is more distinct as a language than Belgian French, which differs from the French spoken in France only in some minor points of vocabulary and pronunciation.

Disputed nature of WalloonEdit

File:Plake Hesta.JPG
lang}}, the Walloon name of the city of Herstal

Linguists had long classified Walloon as a dialect of French, which in turn is a {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. Like French, it descended from Vulgar Latin. Arguing that a French-speaking person could not understand Walloon easily, especially in its eastern forms, Jules Feller (1859–1940) insisted that Walloon had an original "superior unity", which made it a language.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The phonological divisions of regional languages of southern Belgium were studied by the contemporary linguist E.B. Atwood. He defined the precise geographical repartition of the four chief dialects of Walloon. In addition, he defined them against the dialects of Picard, Lorrain and Champenois.<ref>E.B. Atwood, "The phonological divisions of Belgo-Romance", in Orbis, 4, 1955, pp. 367–389.</ref>

Since then, most linguistsTemplate:Citation needed (among them Louis Remacle), and gradually also Walloon politicians, regard Walloon as a regional language, the first in importance in Wallonia. It is the only one to have originated from that part of Belgium. The eleventh edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica identified Walloon as the "northernmost Romance language".

Geographic distributionEdit

WalloonEdit

Walloon is spoken in the Wallonia Region in Belgium. In addition, it is spoken in:

|CitationClass=web }} and Notes from the Field: Wisconsin Walloon Documentation and Orthography Template:Webarchive by Kelly Biers and Ellen Osterhaus, Language Documentation and Conservation, Vol. 15, 2021, pp. 1–29</ref> and

Although Walloon was widely spoken until the mid-20th century, today only a small proportion of the inhabitants of the region are fluent in the language. Those born since the 1970s usually know little more than a few idiomatic expressions, often profanities. The Walloon language is still part of the Walloon heritage; it is one component of Walloon identity.

DialectsEdit

File:Wallonie-linguistique-wa.svg
Main subdivisions of Walloon dialects

Four dialects of Walloon developed in four distinct zones of Wallonia:<ref>Steven G. Kellman Switching languages: translingual writers reflect on their craft, p. 152.</ref>

  • Central, spoken in Namur ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), the Wallon capital, and the cities of Wavre ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) and Dinant;
  • Eastern – in many respects the most conservative and idiosyncratic of the dialects, spoken in Liège ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), Verviers ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), Malmedy ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), Huy ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), and Waremme ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}});
  • Western – the dialect closest to French proper and with a strong Picard influence, spoken in Charleroi ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), Nivelles ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), and Philippeville ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}); and
  • Southern – close to the Lorrain and to a lesser extent Champenois languages, spoken in Bastogne, Marche-en-Famenne ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), and Neufchâteau ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), all in the Ardennes region.

Despite local phonetic differences, there is a regional movement towards the adoption of a common spelling, called the Rifondou walon. This orthography is diasystemic, reflecting different pronunciations for different readers, a concept inspired by the spelling of Breton. The written forms attempt to reconcile current phonetic uses with ancient traditions (notably the reintroduction of xh and oi that were used for writing Walloon until the late 19th century) and the language's own phonological logic.

Other regional languagesEdit

Other regional languages spoken in Wallonia, outside the Walloon domain, are:

The Picard, Lorrain and Champenois dialects spoken in Wallonia are sometimes also referred to as "Walloon", which may lead to confusion.

Phonetics and phonologyEdit

Consonant phonemes of Walloon
Labial Dental/
Alveolar
Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Plosive/
Affricate
Template:Small Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Template:Small Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Fricative Template:Small Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link (Template:IPA link) (Template:IPA link) Template:IPA link
Template:Small Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Trill (Template:IPA link) Template:IPA link
Approximant Template:Small Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Template:Small Template:IPA link Template:IPAlink
  • {{#invoke:IPA|main}} may also be heard as {{#invoke:IPA|main}} or {{#invoke:IPA|main}} in word-final positions.
  • {{#invoke:IPA|main}} may also be pronounced as an alveolar trill {{#invoke:IPA|main}} among speakers.
Vowel phonemes
Front Central Back
unrounded rounded
oral long nasal oral long nasal oral long nasal
Close Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Near-close Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link (Template:IPA link)
Close-mid Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Open-mid Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Open Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
  • {{#invoke:IPA|main}} can have an allophone of {{#invoke:IPA|main}}.
  • Latin {{#invoke:IPA|main}} before {{#invoke:IPA|main}} and {{#invoke:IPA|main}} before {{#invoke:IPA|main}}, {{#invoke:IPA|main}}, or {{#invoke:IPA|main}} gave Walloon affricate phonemes spelled tch {{#invoke:IPA|main}} and dj {{#invoke:IPA|main}}: {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (vs. French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "cow"), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Template:Abbr {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "leg").
  • Latin {{#invoke:IPA|main}} persisted in clusters: {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Fr. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "thorn, spine"), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "wisp of straw", {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Fr. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "master"), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Fr. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "party, feast"), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Fr. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "castle"), and so on.
  • Final obstruent devoicing: {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "red" is pronounced exactly as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "rock".
  • Nasal vowels may be followed by nasal consonants, as in {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "young", {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "cream", {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "dirty", etc.
  • Vowel length has a phonological value. It allows distinguishing {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "arse" and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "cooked", {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "he cradles her" and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "he increases it", {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "mass" and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "master", etc.

OrthographyEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The Walloon alphabet generally consists of the basic ISO Latin Alphabet, and six types of diacritic. It also makes frequent use of digraphs. Various orthographies have been used, most notably the Feller system ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) and Unified Walloon ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}} or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

CharacteristicsEdit

Language familyEdit

Walloon is distinguished from other languages in the langue d'oïl family both by archaism coming from Latin and by its significant borrowing from Germanic languages, as expressed in its phonetics, its lexicon, and its grammar. At the same time, Walloon phonetics are singularly conservative: the language has stayed fairly close to the form it took during the High Middle Ages.

MorphologyEdit

  • The plural feminine adjectives before the noun take an unstressed ending {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (except in the Ardenne dialect): compare {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "the yellow leaf" and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "the yellow leaves".
  • There is no gender difference in definite articles and possessives (except in the Ardenne dialect): compare Walloon {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("the car", feminine) and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("the sky", masculine), with French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}; Walloon has {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("his/her body", masculine) and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("his/her window", feminine) with French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.

LexiconEdit

  • Walloon has a few Latin remnants that have disappeared from neighboring Romance languages: compare Walloon {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to Spanish {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and Romanian {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (all with the same meaning: "to awaken").
  • The most distinctive feature is its number of borrowings from Germanic languages (Dutch and German dialects): compare Walloon {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to today's Dutch {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "weak" (cognate of English flaw). Other common borrowings, among hundreds of others, are {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("tip"; Dutch {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("curl"; Dutch {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("to spatter"; same root as the English to spit, and to spew, or German {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}; Dutch {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (the starling; Dutch {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, or German {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).

SyntaxEdit

  • The adjective is often placed before the noun: compare Walloon {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} with French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, "a strong man"; {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, "a white house".
  • Borrowing from Germanic languages, the construction {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "What kind of flower is this?" can be compared word for word to German {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and Dutch {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, as opposed to Standard French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} or (colloquially) {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.

HistoryEdit

From a linguistic point of view, Louis Remacle has shown that a good number of the developments that we now consider typical of Walloon appeared between the 8th and 12th centuries. Walloon "had a clearly defined identity from the beginning of the 13th century". In any case, linguisticTemplate:Clarify texts from the time do not mention the language, although they mention others in the langue d'oïl family, such as Picard and Lorrain. During the 15th century, scribes in the region called the language "Roman" when they needed to distinguish it. It is not until the beginning of the 16th century that first occurrence of the word "Walloon" appeared in the current linguistic sense. In 1510 or 1511, Jean Lemaire de Belges made the connection between {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}:

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And those people [the inhabitants of Nivelles] speak the old Gallic language which we call Vualon or Rommand (...). And we use the said old Vualon or Rommand language in our Belgian Gaul: That is to say in Hainaut, Cambrai, Artois, Namur, Liège, Lorraine, Ardennes and Rommand Brabant, and it is very different from French, which is more fashionable and courtly.{{#if:|{{#if:|}}

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The word "Walloon" thus came closer to its current meaning: the vernacular of the Roman part of the Low Countries. One might say that the period which saw the establishment of the unifying supremacy of the Burgundians in the Walloon country was a turning-point in their linguistic history. The crystallization of a Walloon identity, as opposed to that of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (i.e. Dutch-speaking) regions of the Low Countries, established "Walloon" as a word for designating its people. Somewhat later, the vernacular of these people became more clearly distinct from central French and other neighbouring langues d'oïl, prompting the abandonment of the vague term "Roman" as a linguistic, ethnic, and political designator for "Walloon".

Also at this time, following the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts in 1539, the French language replaced Latin for all administrative purposes in France. Established as the academic language, French became the object of a political effort at normalization; {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} posited the view that when two languages of the same language family coexist, each can be defined only in opposition to the other. Around the year 1600, the French writing system became dominant in the Wallonia. From this time, too, dates a tradition of texts written in a language marked by traces of spoken Walloon. The written language of the preceding centuries, scripta, was a composite language with some Walloon characteristics but it did not attempt to be a systematic reproduction of the spoken language.

Walloon society and cultureEdit

Walloon was the predominant language of the Walloon people until the beginning of the 20th century, although they had a passing knowledge of French. Since that time, the use of French has spread to the extent that now only 15% of the Walloon population speak their ancestral language. Breaking the statistics down by age, 70–80% of the population aged over 60 speak Walloon, while only about 10% of those under 30 do so. Passing knowledge of Walloon is much more widespread: claimed by some 36–58% of the younger age bracket. Laurent Hendschel estimates there are 1,300,000 bilingual people in Wallonia (Walloon-French, Picard-French...).<ref>Some other figures in Laurent Hendschel, "Quelques indices pour se faire une idée de la vitalité du Wallon", in Lucien Mahin (editor), Qué walon po dmwin?, Quorum, 1999, p. 128. Template:ISBN</ref> Many French words that pertain to mining and to the textile trade derive from the Walloon-Picard complex.<ref>Steven G. Kellman, Switching languages: translingual writers reflect on their craft, p. 152.</ref>

Legally, Walloon has been recognized since 1990 by the French Community of Belgium, the cultural authority of Wallonia, as an "indigenous regional language" which must be studied in schools and encouraged. The Walloon cultural movement includes the Union Culturelle Wallonne, an organization of over 200 amateur theatre circles, writers' groups, and school councils. About a dozen Walloon magazines publish regularly. The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, founded in 1856, promotes Walloon literature and the study (dialectology, etymology, etc.) of the regional Roman languages of Wallonia. There is a difference between the Walloon culture, according to the Manifesto for Walloon culture, and the Walloon language (even if the latter is a part of the culture).Template:Vague

LiteratureEdit

File:Djåcreye 1886.jpg
Cartoon in Walloon by Template:Interlanguage link for a 2010 issue of Walloon-speaking magazine Template:Interlanguage link
File:Tchanson longuès pupes tere Walons Wisconsene.jpg
Walloon lyrics to the song "Tins d' eraler" (Time to go home).

Walloon-language literature has been printed since the 16th century, or at least since the beginning of the 17th century.<ref>In his Anthologie de la littérature wallonne, Mardaga, Liège, 1978, Template:ISBN Maurice Piron is speaking (p. 5) about four dialogues printed between 1631 and 1636</ref> It had its "golden age" during the peak of the Flemish immigration to Wallonia in the 19th century: "That period saw an efflorescence of Walloon literature, plays and poems primarily, and the founding of many theaters and periodicals."<ref name=Kellman>Switching Languages, Translingual Writers Reflect on Their Craft, Ed. y Steven G. Kellman, Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 2003, p. 153. Template:ISBN</ref>

The New York Public Library holds a large collection of literary works in Walloon, quite possibly the largest outside Belgium, and its holdings are representative of the output. Out of nearly a thousand works, twenty-six were published before 1880. Thereafter the numbers rise gradually year by year, reaching a peak of sixty-nine in 1903. After that, publications in Walloon fell markedly, to eleven in 1913.<ref name=Kellman /> Yves Quairiaux counted 4,800 plays for 1860–1914, published or not.<ref>Yves Quairiaux, L'image du Flamand en Wallonie, Essai d'analyse sociale et politique (1830-1914) (The Image of Flanders in Wallonia, Essay in Social and Political Analysis), Bruwxelles: Labor, 2006, p. 126. Template:ISBN</ref> In this period, plays were almost the only popular entertainment in Wallonia. The Walloon-language theatre remains popular in the region; theatre is flourishing with more than 200 non-professional companies playing in the cities and villages of Wallonia for an audience of over 200,000 each year.<ref>Lorint Hendschel, "The Walloon Language Page" Template:Webarchive, Skynet, accessed 21 October 2010</ref>

During the 19th-century renaissance of Walloon-language literature, several authors adapted versions of Aesop's Fables to the racy speech (and subject matter) of Liège.<ref>Anthologie de la littérature wallonne (ed. Maurice Piron), Liège, 1979; limited preview at Google Books Google Books</ref> They included Charles Duvivier (in 1842); Joseph Lamaye (1845); and the team of Jean-Joseph Dehin (1847, 1851–1852) and François Bailleux (1851–1866), who covered books I-VI.<ref>There is a partial preview at Google Books </ref> Adaptations into other dialects were made by Charles Letellier (Mons, 1842) and Charles Wérotte (Namur, 1844). Decades later, Léon Bernus published some hundred imitations of La Fontaine in the dialect of Charleroi (1872);<ref>The text of four can be found at Walon.org</ref> he was followed during the 1880s by Joseph Dufrane, writing in the Borinage dialect under the pen-name Bosquètia. In the 20th century, Joseph Houziaux (1946) published a selection of 50 fables in the Condroz dialect.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The motive among Walloon speakers in both France and Belgium was to assert regional identity against the growing centralism and encroachment of the language of the capital, on what had until then been predominantly monoglot areas.

There are links between French literature and Walloon literature. For instance, the writer Raymond Queneau set the publication of a Walloon Poets' anthology for Editions Gallimard. Ubu roi was translated into Walloon by André Blavier, an important 'pataphysician of Verviers, and friend of Queneau, for the new and important Puppet theater of Liège of Jacques Ancion. The Al Botroûle theater operated "as the umbilical cord" in Walloon, indicating a desire to return to the source.<ref name=Gross /> Jacques Ancion also wanted to develop a regular adult audience. "From the 19th century he included the Walloon play Tati l'Pèriquî by E. Remouchamps and the avant-garde Ubu roi by A. Jarry."<ref name=Gross>Joan Gross, Speaking in Other Voices: An Ethnography of Walloon Puppet Theaters. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins Press, 2001, Template:ISBN</ref> The scholar Jean-Marie Klinkenberg writes, "[T]he dialectal culture is no more a sign of attachment to the past but a way to participate to a new synthesis".<ref>Benoît Denis et Jean-Marie Klinkenberg, "Littérature : entre insularité et activisme" (Literature: between insularity and activism), in Le Tournant des années 1970. Liège en effervescence, Bruxelles, Les Impressions nouvelles, 2010, pp. 237–253, p. 252. French : Ancion monte l'Ubu rwè en 1975 (...) la culture dialectalisante cesse d'être une marque de passéisme pour participer à une nouvelle synthèse...</ref>

Walloon is also being used in popular song. The best-known singer in Walloon in present-day Wallonia is William Dunker (Template:Abbr 15 March 1959).

PhrasesEdit

Walloon Phonetic French Limburgian Dutch German English
lang}} main}} lang}} lang}} lang}} lang}} Walloon
lang}} main}} lang}} lang}} lang}} lang}} Bye (from Goodbye, a contraction of "God be with ye")
lang}} main}} lang}} lang}} lang}} lang}} Hello (Good day)
lang}} main}} lang}} lang}}/{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} lang}} lang}} Hi (often followed by another expression)
lang}} main}} lang}} lang}}/{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}/{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}/{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} lang}} lang}} Goodbye (lit. See you again/See you later)
lang}} main}} lang}} lang}} lang}} lang}} How do you say (How does one say)?
lang}} main}} lang}} lang}} lang}} lang}} How are you? (How goes it? / How's it going?)
lang}} main}} lang}} lang}} lang}} lang}} I don't know

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

FootnotesEdit

Template:Reflist

CitationsEdit

  • Maurice Piron, Anthologie de la littérature wallonne, Mardaga, Liège, 1978 (661 pages) Template:ISBN.
  • de Reuse, Willem J. La phonologie du français de la région de Charleroi (Belgique) et ses rapports avec le wallon. La Linguistique Vol. 23, Fasc. 2. 1987.
  • Hendschel, Lorint. Li Croejhete Walone Contribution à une grammaire de la langue wallonne. 2001, 2012.

External linksEdit

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