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French Geolinguistics and Linguistic Atlases From nascency to the status quo ...
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French Geolinguistics and Linguistic Atlases From nascency to the status quo ...
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A Geolinguistic Analysis of "Oie" and "Jars" - Evidence from the Atlas Linguistique de la France - ...
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A Geolinguistic Analysis of "Oie" and "Jars" - Evidence from the Atlas Linguistique de la France - ...
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Abstract:
In standard French, goose as a generic term and a female goose is “une oie,” and a gander is “un jars.” “Oie” is derived from Latin AUCA, and “jars,” according to Dauzat (1921: 9-16), from pre-Latin GARR- . In this research, by employing Map 936 “oie” (goose) from the Atlas Linguistique de la France ( ALF ), we investigated the following four research questions: I. What is the distribution of the forms of “oie” as a generic term for ‘goose’? II. Where did the phonetic change [ɔ] > [ɔi] occur, according to Frantext ? III. Is the word “jars” the oldest word for ‘gander’ in France? IV. What is the distribution of the forms of “jars”? Our finding, concerning “oie,” indicated that older forms, such as [auka], [ɔə] and [oj], remained in the periphery and the standard form [wa] might have moved from central to southeastern France by following the Rhône and its tributaries’ basins. We, however, could not clarify the origin of the phonetic change [ɔ] > [ɔi] in “oie.” First, we found that forms of “jars” were ...
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Keyword:
Atlas Linguistique de la France; dialectology; geolinguistics; jars gander; oie goose
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URL: https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5529208 https://zenodo.org/record/5529208
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