Jèrriais

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Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Use dmy dates {{#invoke:Infobox|infobox}}Template:Template otherTemplate:Main other{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check |unknown=Template:Main other |preview=Page using Template:Infobox language with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| acceptance | agency | aiatsis | aiatsis2 | aiatsis3 | aiatsis4 | aiatsis5 | aiatsis6 | aiatsisname | aiatsisname2 | aiatsisname3 | aiatsisname4 | aiatsisname5 | aiatsisname6 | altname | ancestor | ancestor2 | ancestor3 | ancestor4 | ancestor5 | ancestor6 | ancestor7 | ancestor8 | ancestor9 | ancestor10 | ancestor11 | ancestor12 | ancestor13 | ancestor14 | ancestor15 | boxsize | coordinates | coords | created | creator | date | dateprefix | development_body | dia1 | dia2 | dia3 | dia4 | dia5 | dia6 | dia7 | dia8 | dia9 | dia10 | dia11 | dia12 | dia13 | dia14 | dia15 | dia16 | dia17 | dia18 | dia19 | dia20 | dia21 | dia22 | dia23 | dia24 | dia25 | dia26 | dia27 | dia28 | dia29 | dia30 | dia31 | dia32 | dia33 | dia34 | dia35 | dia36 | dia37 | dia38 | dia39 | dia40 | dialect_label | dialects | ELP | ELP2 | ELP3 | ELP4 | ELP5 | ELP6 | ELPname | ELPname2 | ELPname3 | ELPname4 | ELPname5 | ELPname6 | era | ethnicity | extinct | fam1 | fam2 | fam3 | fam4 | fam5 | fam6 | fam7 | fam8 | fam9 | fam10 | fam11 | fam12 | fam13 | fam14 | fam15 | family | familycolor | fontcolor | glotto | glotto2 | glotto3 | glotto4 | glotto5 | glottoname | glottoname2 | glottoname3 | glottoname4 | glottoname5 | glottopedia | glottorefname | glottorefname2 | glottorefname3 | glottorefname4 | glottorefname5 | guthrie | ietf | image | imagealt | imagecaption | imagescale | iso1 | iso1comment | iso2 | iso2b | iso2comment | iso2t | iso3 | iso3comment | iso6 | isoexception | lc1 | lc2 | lc3 | lc4 | lc5 | lc6 | lc7 | lc8 | lc9 | lc10 | lc11 | lc12 | lc13 | lc14 | lc15 | lc16 | lc17 | lc18 | lc19 | lc20 | lc21 | lc22 | lc23 | lc24 | lc25 | lc26 | lc27 | lc28 | lc29 | lc30 | lc31 | lc32 | lc33 | lc34 | lc35 | lc36 | lc37 | lc38 | lc39 | lc40 | ld1 | ld2 | ld3 | ld4 | ld5 | ld6 | ld7 | ld8 | ld9 | ld10 | ld11 | ld12 | ld13 | ld14 | ld15 | ld16 | ld17 | ld18 | ld19 | ld20 | ld21 | ld22 | ld23 | ld24 | ld25 | ld26 | ld27 | ld28 | ld29 | ld30 | ld31 | ld32 | ld33 | ld34 | ld35 | ld36 | ld37 | ld38 | ld39 | ld40 | linglist | linglist2 | linglist3 | linglist4 | linglist5 | linglist6 | lingname | lingname2 | lingname3 | lingname4 | lingname5 | lingname6 | lingua | lingua2 | lingua3 | lingua4 | lingua5 | lingua6 | lingua7 | lingua8 | lingua9 | lingua10 | linguaname | linguaname2 | linguaname3 | linguaname4 | linguaname5 | linguaname6 | linguaname7 | linguaname8 | linguaname9 | linguaname10 | listclass | liststyle | map | map2 | mapalt | mapalt2 | mapcaption | mapcaption2 | mapscale | minority | module | name | nation | nativename | notice | notice2 | official | posteriori | pronunciation | protoname | pushpin_image | pushpin_label | pushpin_label_position | pushpin_map | pushpin_map_alt | pushpin_map_caption | pushpin_mapsize | qid | ref | refname | region | revived | revived-cat | revived-category | script | setting | sign | signers | speakers | speakers_label | speakers2 | stand1 | stand2 | stand3 | stand4 | stand5 | stand6 | standards | state | states }}<templatestyles src="Template:Infobox/styles-images.css" /> File:Ben Spink speaks Jèrriais and recites "Man Bieau P'tit Jèrri".ogg Template:Lang (Template:Langx Template:IPA; also known as the Jersey language, Jersey French and Jersey Norman French in English) is a Romance language and the traditional language of the Jersey people. It is a form of the Norman language spoken in Jersey, an island in the Channel Islands archipelago off the coast of France. Its closest relatives are the other Norman languages, such as Template:Lang, spoken in neighbouring Guernsey, and the other Template:Lang.

Use of Template:Lang has been in decline over the past century, as English has increasingly become the language of education, commerce and administration on Jersey. There are very few people who speak Jèrriais as a mother tongue and, owing to the age of the remaining speakers, their numbers decrease annually. Despite this, efforts are being made to keep the language alive.

The language of Sark, Sercquiais, is a descendant of the Jèrriais brought by the Jersey colonists who settled Sark in the 16th century, with mutual intelligibility with the Norman language of mainland Normandy.

Jèrriais is often called "Jersey French" or "Jersey Norman French" in English (though this may give the impression that the language is a dialect of French) and Template:Lang or Template:Lang in French. Jèrriais is distinct from the Jersey Legal French used for legal contracts, laws and official documents by the government and administration of Jersey. For this reason, some prefer using the term "Jersey Norman" to avoid ambiguity and to dissociate the language from standard French.

History

Some bilingual (or trilingual) signage may be seen in Jersey, such as this welcome sign at a supermarket.

Although few now speak Jèrriais as a first language, until the 19th century it was used as the everyday language for the majority of the population of Jersey; even as late as the beginning of the Second World War, up to half the population could still communicate in the language.Template:Efn Despite this, awareness of the decline of language use became apparent in the 19th century in scholarly circles. Among foreign linguists, Louis Lucien Bonaparte visited Jersey and interested himself in the language and its literature. Victor Hugo, during his exile in Jersey, took an interest in the language and numbered some Jèrriais writers among his circle of acquaintances and supporters.

Sir Robert Pipon Marett's prestige and influence helped to reinforce the movement toward standardisation of the writing system based on French orthography, a trend which was also helped by the Norman literary revival beginning in the neighbouring Cotentin Peninsula of mainland Normandy, where writers inspired by the example of the Norman writers of Jersey and Guernsey, also began to produce literary works. However, differing (if mutually comprehensible) writing systems have been adopted in Jersey, Guernsey, and mainland Normandy. It is sometimes asked whether Jèrriais should move to a writing system based on French orthography; however, this would have implications for the continuity of the literary tradition over two centuries or more, though some features of the language's writing system, such as the digraph "th" for the typical dental fricative of Jèrriais, have evidently been borrowed from English orthography.

As English became dominant in Jersey in the 20th century, efforts were made to preserve the Jèrriais language. The Jersey Eisteddfod has included a Jèrriais section since 1912. Associations were founded; Template:Lang was founded in 1951, while Template:Lang is a trust set up in accordance with the will of Arthur E. Balleine (1864–1943), who bequeathed funds for the promotion of the language. Template:Lang launched a quarterly magazine in 1952, which has been published since (with the occasional hiatus, and latterly under the editorship of Template:Lang); a standard grammar Template:Lang (by Paul Birt) appeared in 1985; cassettes, booklets and other materials have also been produced.

George d'la Forge's maintenance of the language in the North American diaspora is not as surprising as it might seem, as considerable numbers of Jersey people had been involved in the economic development and exploitation of the New World (see New Jersey). Much of the concentration focused on the cod fisheries of the Gaspé peninsula in Quebec, Canada, which were controlled into the early 20th century by Jersey-based companies or companies of Jersey origin employing Jersey labour. The common language of business was Jèrriais, and it is reportedTemplate:By whom that there were still some Jèrriais-speakers in Gaspé villages in the 1960s. The Gaspesian expression Template:Lang (to go and work outside the region) comes from the Jèrriais word "run" applied to a fishing station.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

An inscription, reading "Liberated" in Jèrriais, was installed at Template:Lang in St. Helier in 2005 to mark the 60th anniversary of the Liberation.

The use of Jèrriais is also noted during the German occupation of the Channel Islands during the Second World War; the local population used it among themselves as a language which neither the occupying Germans, nor their French interpreters, could understand. However, the social and economic upheaval of the war meant that use of English increased dramatically after the Liberation.

It is considered that the last monolingual adult speakers probably died in the 1950sTemplate:Citation needed, although monolingual children were being received into schools in St. Ouen as late as the late 1970s.Template:Citation needed

Famous Jèrriais speakers include Lillie Langtry and Sir John Everett Millais, the Pre-Raphaelite painter, who are reported to have spoken to each other in the language when he was painting her portrait.

Dictionaries

The history of Jèrriais dictionaries goes back to 19th century manuscript glossaries of Philippe Langlois, A. A. Le Gros, and Thomas Gaudin. These were later revised and expanded into the Template:Lang published in 1924 by Template:Lang. The 1960 Glossary of Jersey French (Nichol Spence) recorded Jèrriais in a phonetic script. The 1924 Template:Lang inspired the research by Frank Le Maistre that culminated in the Template:Lang published in 1966 to mark the 900th anniversary of the Norman Conquest of England. The first practical English–Jèrriais dictionary was the English-Jersey Language Vocabulary (Albert Carré in collaboration with Frank Le Maistre and Philip de Veulle, 1972) which was itself based on the Template:Lang. A children's picture dictionary, Template:Lang, was published by Template:Lang in 2000. In 2005, a Jèrriais–English dictionary, Template:Lang was published by Template:Lang, in collaboration with Template:Lang. A revised, modernised and expanded English–Jèrriais dictionary, Template:Lang, was published in 2008 by Template:Lang.<ref>Dictionnaithe Angliais-Jèrriais, Jersey 2008, Template:ISBN</ref>

Status

Jersey Airport greets travellers with "Welcome to Jersey" in Jèrriais.
File:Jersey Evening Post Jersey Norman-French.jpg
Local newspaper Jersey Evening Post hosts a Jersey Norman-French feature, with Jèrriais texts accompanied by their translation into English.

The latest figures come from the Jersey Annual Social Survey issued on 5 December 2012.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The survey of 4200 households took place in June 2012 and resulted in 2400 returns. It showed that 18% of the population could speak some Jèrriais words and phrases, with more than 7% of those over 65 being fluent or able to speak a significant amount of Jèrriais. Two-thirds of adults said that they could not understand spoken Jèrriais, but more than a quarter were able to understand some, and 5% could usually or fully understand someone speaking Jèrriais. 4% of people said that they could write some Jèrriais, although under 1% could write fluently. Just under a third (32%) said that they could understand something written in Jèrriais.

These figures update those of the census of 2001, which showed that approximately 3% of the island's population spoke Jèrriais in their personal interactions, although research suggests that up to 15% of the population have some understanding of the language. The latest census figures also showed an increase in declarations of children speaking the language: the first such increase recorded in census figures (although this may be due to greater consciousness among parents rather than to language use), doubtless encouraged by the introduction of a Jèrriais teaching programme into Jersey schools.

The parish with the highest proportion of Jèrriais speakers (8%) is Saint Ouen, and the parish with the lowest proportion (2.1%) is Saint Helier, although that is the largest parish and has the highest number of Jèrriais speakers. The number of census respondents who stated that they "usually" spoke Jèrriais was 113; 2,761 respondents stated that they "sometimes" spoke it. A survey carried out among a sample of Jèrriais speakers in 1996 found that 18% spoke the language more often than English, 66% spoke it as often as English, and 16% spoke it less often than English.<ref>Jèrriais: Jersey's Native Tongue, Jones 2003</ref>

The States of Jersey fund the teaching programme in schools and provide some support in terms of signage, such as welcome signs at harbours and the airport. Ratification of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages is under discussion. In September 2005, the States approved the development of a cultural strategy, one of whose strategic objectives was as follows:

Jersey almost lost its language in the 20th century. By 2001 there were less than 3,000 speakers of Jèrriais. In the 21st century strenuous efforts are being made to re-establish it. Template:Lang, funded by the States, is leading a programme in schools teaching Jèrriais. Template:Lang promotes the language generally. Language brings distinctiveness, a sense of localness and a whole new set of skills all of which are important qualities in attracting the creative economy. It is fundamental to the Island's identity. This objective is to work with these organisations to help in the revival and status of the language.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In September 2009, a partnership agreement was signed by the Minister for Education, Sport and Culture and the President of Template:Lang to formalise the role of Template:Lang in protecting and promoting Jèrriais and to develop a language plan to help make the language more prominent on a daily basis; there is newspaper and radio output in the language, and as part of the language's promotion, from 2010, Jersey banknotes carry the value of the note written out in Jèrriais.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Jèrriais is currently classified as "threatened" by the Endangered Languages Project.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Clear left

Jèrriais is recognised as a regional language by the British and Irish governments within the framework of the British–Irish Council. On 13 February 2019, the States of Jersey adopted Jèrriais as an official language, and the language is set to be used on signage and official letter headings.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Phonology

Jèrriais Consonants<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Labial Dental/
Alveolar
Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar/
glottal
plain sibilant
Nasal 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:Small Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Rhotic Template:IPA link
Approximant Template:Small Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Template:Small Template:IPA link Template:IPA link

Template:IPAslink may also be heard as an approximant sound Template:IPAblink.

The phonological influence of Norse is debated, although the aspirated "h" may be due to Norse influence.Template:Citation needed

Jèrriais Oral Vowels
  Front Back
Template:Small Template:Small
Close Template:IPA link Template:IPA link 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
Open-mid Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Open Template:IPA link Template:IPA link
Nasal Vowels
Front Back
Template:Small Template:Small
Close-mid 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
Open Template:IPA link Template:IPA link

Palatalisation

The palatalisation of Latin Template:IPA and Template:IPA before Template:IPA that occurred in the development of French did not occur in northern dialects of Norman, including Jèrriais:

Jèrriais English French
Template:Lang to buy Template:Lang
Template:Lang cat Template:Lang
Template:Lang cow Template:Lang
Template:Lang warm Template:Lang
Template:Lang garden Template:Lang
Template:Lang leg Template:Lang
Palatalization is evident in Jèrriais Template:Lang compared with French Template:Lang (though they are not cognate) in this bilingual placename sign.

However the palatalisation of Template:IPA before front vowels produced different results in the Norman dialect that developed into Jèrriais than in French. (Many developments are similar to those in Italian, cf. Template:Lang "hundred" and Template:Lang "face").

Jèrriais English French
Template:Lang basin Template:Lang
Template:Lang face Template:Lang
Template:Lang fashion Template:Lang
Template:Lang hundred Template:Lang
Template:Lang (road of the dog): Latin Template:Lang (dog) developed into Template:Lang, an example of the palatalisation of Template:IPA.

At a later date surviving Template:IPA and Template:IPA underwent a secondary process of palatalisation:

Jèrriais English French
Template:Lang to mock Template:Lang
Template:Lang packet Template:Lang
Template:Lang guide Template:Lang
The word Template:Lang ("park") is a result of palatalization.

This palatalisation continues to operate (except in initial position) as can be seen by recent borrowings from English:

Jèrriais English
Template:Lang to busk
Template:Lang to cook
Template:Lang to plug
Template:Lang bragger

Dental fricative

A feature of Jèrriais that is immediately noticeable and distinguishes it from neighbouring languages is the voiced dental fricative Template:IPA, written th, that typically occurs in intervocalic position:

Jèrriais French English
Template:Lang Template:Lang barrel
Template:Lang Template:Lang to measure
Template:Lang Template:Lang (payment office) payment
Template:Lang Template:Lang pillow
Template:Lang road name (meaning the black road) shows the th digraph representing the voiced dental fricative.

Or in final position:

Jèrriais French English
Template:Lang Template:Lang mother
Template:Lang Template:Lang (bray) to cry

The fricative devoices to assimilate with a neighbouring unvoiced consonant in words such as Template:Lang (packing) or Template:Lang (disgusting).

The fricative developed from Template:IPA + front vowel, but evidently after the 16th century as this feature is unknown in the language of Sark (colonised by Jersey families). Although the voiced dental fricative is standard in the literary language, it is not found in the eastern dialects.

This gravestone of George Francis Le Feuvre ("George d'la Forge"), at St. Ouen Parish Church, describes him as Template:Lang (Jèrriais author). The particular St. Ouennais form of Template:Lang with final dental fricative is represented.

Some older speakers in St. Ouen use a dental fricative in positions where other dialects show a Template:IPA. This may be represented in the orthography of particular writers.

standard Jèrriais St. Ouennais English
Template:Lang Template:Lang house
Template:Lang Template:Lang birds (collective)
Template:Lang Template:Lang chair
Template:Lang Template:Lang anglicise

The dental fricative in the dialect of such speakers may also be heard in liaison:

standard Jèrriais St. Ouennais English
Template:Lang Template:Lang you are
Template:Lang Template:Lang these tools
Template:Lang Template:Lang one has

Length

Length is phonemic in Jèrriais. Long vowels are usually indicated in writing by a circumflex accent. A noun ending in a vowel lengthens the final vowel to indicate the plural (shown in writing by adding an s).

Gemination occurs regularly in verb tenses, indicated by a consonant-apostrophe-consonant trigraph, for example: Template:Lang (she will speak); Template:Lang (we will begin); Template:Lang (he would give). Gerunds will also regularly contain geminate consonants, for example: Template:Lang (doing, making); Template:Lang (singing); Template:Lang (shooting); Template:Lang (sweeping); Template:Lang (winning).

Orthography

Consonants
IPA English equivalent Examples
b Template:IPAblink b Template:Lang
c Template:IPAblink k Template:Lang
c (before e, i, y) Template:IPAblink s Template:Lang
ç
ch Template:IPAblink sh Template:Lang
d Template:IPAblink d Template:Lang
dg Template:IPAblink j Template:Lang
f Template:IPAblink f Template:Lang
g Template:IPAblink g Template:Lang
Template:IPA silent Template:Lang
g (before e, i) Template:IPAblink zh (French j; s as in measure or vision) Template:Lang
h Template:IPA silent Template:Lang
Template:IPAblink h Template:Lang
i Template:IPAblink y Template:Lang
j Template:IPAblink zh (French j; s as in measure or vision) Template:Lang
k Template:IPAblink k Template:Lang
l Template:IPAblink l Template:Lang
l (before i or y)

except l'ye

Template:IPA silent Template:Lang meubl'ye
-ill Template:IPAblink y Template:Lang (ex. Template:Lang)
m Template:IPAblink m Template:Lang
n Template:IPAblink n Template:Lang
ngn Template:IPAblink ny (onion); think Spanish "ñ" Template:Lang
p Template:IPAblink p Template:Lang
Template:IPA silent Template:Lang
qu Template:IPAblink k Template:Lang
r Template:IPAblink rr in Spanish Template:Lang
Template:IPA silent Template:Lang
s Template:IPAblink s Template:Lang
Template:IPAblink z Template:Lang
sc Template:IPAblink s Template:Lang
t Template:IPAblink t Template:Lang
tch Template:IPAblink ch Template:Lang
ti(on) Template:IPAblink s Template:Lang
th Template:IPAblink "hard" or "voiced" th-sound (as in that) Template:Lang
Template:IPAblink "soft" or "voiceless" th-sound (as in thin) Template:Lang
v Template:IPAblink v Template:Lang
w Template:IPAblink w loan words
x Template:IPAblink/Template:IPAblink s or z Template:Lang
y Template:IPAblink y Template:Lang
z Template:IPAblink z Template:Lang
Vowels Template:Citation needed
IPA English equivalent Examples
Template:IPA link i
Template:IPA link î
Template:IPA link u
Template:IPA link û
Template:IPA link ou
Template:IPA link
Template:IPA link é
Template:IPA link ée
Template:IPA link oe
Template:IPA link
Template:IPA link o
Template:IPA link ô
Template:IPA link è
Template:IPA link ê
Template:IPA link òe
Template:IPA link òê
Template:IPA link a
Template:IPA link â
Template:IPA link in
Template:IPA link în
Template:IPA link un
Template:IPA link ûn
Template:IPA link on
Template:IPA link ôn
Template:IPA link en
Template:IPA link ên
Template:IPA link an
Template:IPA link ân

Grammar

Verbs

Aspect

Jèrriais distinguishes between simple, progressive and perfect aspect:

Past:

preterite Template:Lang we spoke
progressive Template:Lang she was speaking
perfect Template:Lang you have spoken
imperfect Template:Lang I spoke

Future:

simple Template:Lang I will speak
progressive Template:Lang you will be speaking
perfect Template:Lang she will have spoken

Present:

simple Template:Lang I speak
progressive Template:Lang they are speaking

Iterative

Verbs can be made iterative in aspect by prefixing Template:Lang (long form) or Template:Lang (short form):

Template:Lang have
Template:Lang have again
   
Template:Lang be
Template:Lang be again
   
Template:Lang clean
Template:Lang clean again
   
Template:Lang hide
Template:Lang hide again
   
Template:Lang watch
Template:Lang watch again
   
Template:Lang phone
Template:Lang phone again

Gerunds

This sign for a cidermaking event demonstrates the gemination Template:Lang in the gerund Template:Lang.

Verbs can be transformed into gerunds, which are commonly used:

Template:Lang sing
Template:Lang singing
   
Template:Lang make
Template:Lang making
   
Template:Lang pull
Template:Lang hauling, haulage
   
Template:Lang park
Template:Lang parking
   
Template:Lang read
Template:Lang reading
   
Template:Lang fax
Template:Lang faxing

Vocabulary

Although Jèrriais is occasionally misleadingly described as a mixture of Old Norse and French, it is more linguistically accurate to describe the language as Norse adapted to langue d'oïl; when Norse-speaking Normans (lit. "North-man") conquered the territory now known as Normandy, they began speaking the language of their new subjects, leading to its influence on the language. The Norman language is therefore in essence a Romance language with a certain amount of vocabulary of Norse origin, with the inclusion of later loanwords from other languages.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Influence of Norse

Norse origins can be seen in Jèrriais words such as these:

Influence of Breton

Jèrriais has also adopted a small number of words from the Breton language (e.g. Template:Lang 'spider crab', from Breton Template:Lang 'small'; Template:Lang 'fast', from Breton Template:Lang 'hare'), although the influence on today's language has overwhelmingly been from French and, increasingly, English.

Influence of French

In this road sign, mostly in French, the word Template:Lang is Jèrriais for dolmen.

A large number of gallicisms have been introduced into the language due to the use of French as an official language and the cultural influence of France and French literature. Some French words have displaced in modern usage Jèrriais words that can still be found in older texts from the 18th and 19th centuries, for example:

Efforts are being made to maintain some Jèrriais words which are competing in usage with French forms, for example:

Influence of English

Some maritime vocabulary was borrowed from English at an early date, for example Template:Lang (boatswain), but by the late 18th century some domestic vocabulary, such as:

entered the language through the employment of Jèrriais-speaking servants in the houses of bourgeois English-speaking immigrants.

Other words borrowed from English before 1900 include:

However, care needs to be taken in attempting to identify anglicisms because some words, such as Template:Lang (mug) and Template:Lang (can), which are often assumed to have been borrowed from English, were in fact Norman words exported to England in the wake of the Norman Conquest; and words such as Template:Lang (flock) and Template:Lang (rig) are Norman cognates of English words.

More recently, words such as Template:Lang (to book), Template:Lang (to park) and Template:Lang (tyre) have been absorbed into the language, although current initiatives in creating neologisms for technological and social innovations prefer to avoid wholesale borrowing where possible. Among recent coinings are words such as Template:Lang for texting, Template:Lang for webmaster (literally master-spider) and Template:Lang for megabyte.

Literature

Template:Main

The tradition of literature in Jèrriais can be traced back to Wace, a 12th century Jersey-born poet, although there is little surviving literature in Jèrriais dating to before the introduction of the first printing press in Jersey in the 1780s. The first printed Jèrriais appeared in the first newspapers at the end of the 18th century, and the earliest identified dated example of printed poetry is a fragment by Template:Lang (Matthew Le Geyt 1777–1849), dated to 1795. A boom in competing newspapers and journals throughout the 19th century provided a platform for poets and writers to publish regularly – typically, satirical comment on the week's news, elections, Jersey politicians and notables. The first printed anthology of Jèrriais poetry, Rimes Jersiaises, was published in 1865.

Influential writers include "Laelius" (Sir Robert Pipon Marett 1820–1884, Bailiff of Jersey, 1880–1884), "A.A.L.G." (Augustus Aspley Le Gros, 1840–1877), and "St.-Luorenchais" (Philippe Langlois, 1817–1884). "Elie" (Edwin J. Luce, 1881–1918) was editor of the French language newspaper Template:Lang, and a poet who wrote topical poems for the newspaper. He was also active in promoting the development of drama in Jèrriais and organised performances, ultimately leading to the establishment of a Jèrriais section of the Jersey Eisteddfod in 1912.

During the German occupation of the Channel Islands, Nazi censors permitted little original writing to be published. However, many older pieces of literature were re-published in the newspapers as an act of cultural self-assertion and morale-boosting. Following the end of Occupation, and with the re-establishment of the free press, Edward Le Brocq (1877–1964) revived a weekly column in 1946 with a letter from Template:Lang, supposedly a traditional old couple who would comment on the latest news or recall times past.

The most influential writer of Jèrriais in the 20th century was a U.S. citizen, George Francis Le Feuvre (1891–1984), whose pen-name was "George d'la Forge". He emigrated to North America after the First World War, but for almost forty years maintained a flow of articles in Jèrriais back to Jersey for publication in newspapers. Selections of his articles have been published in book form.

Frank Le Maistre (1910–2002), compiler of the dictionary Template:Lang, maintained a literary output starting in the 1930s with newspaper articles under the pseudonym Template:Lang, poems, magazine articles, research into toponymy and etymology. Since Le Maistre, Geraint Jennings has been influential in preserving the language by compiling thousands of pages of Jèrriais text online in Template:Lang, including parts of the Bible.

Examples

Bilingual banner for Make Poverty History, July 2005, reading Template:Lang (No to poverty)
Jèrriais French English
Template:Lang Template:Lang Jersey
Template:Lang Template:Lang welcome
Template:Lang Template:Lang garden (yard)
Template:Lang Template:Lang beauty
Template:Lang Template:Lang hello
Template:Lang Template:Lang trousers
Template:Lang Template:Lang brush
Template:Lang Template:Lang dear
Template:Lang Template:Lang compare
Template:Lang Template:Lang abroad
Template:Lang Template:Lang never
Template:Lang Template:Lang link
Template:Lang Template:Lang bag
Template:Lang Template:Lang chair
Template:Lang Template:Lang dog
Template:Lang Template:Lang kettle
Template:Lang Template:Lang journeys
Template:Lang Template:Lang eye

See also

Template:Interwiki

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

Template:Reflist

Literature

  • Lé Jèrriais Pour Tous by Paul W. Birt, 1985.
  • Dictionnaire Jersiais–Français, 1966.
  • A Grammar of the Norman French of the Channel Islands: The Dialects of Jersey and Sark by Anthony J. Liddicoat, 1994. Template:ISBN
  • Jersey Norman French: A Linguistic Study of An Obsolescent Dialect . Mari C. Jones, 2001
  • Jèrriais: Jersey's Native Tongue by Mari C. Jones, 2003. Template:ISBN
  • Dictionnaithe Jèrriais-Angliais. 2005. Template:ISBN
  • Les Chroniques du Don Balleine/Les Nouvelles Chroniques du Don Balleine (magazine). Jersey 1979 – current.

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