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Quebec French or Québécois French is a dialect of French spoken by the great majority of people in Quebec. It developed out of 17th and 18th century French and in many respects it resembles it more closely than contemporary France French, although it also includes elements of various provincial dialects and oïl languages.

In Quebec, depending on one's perception of its status as a rightful dialect, the language may be called le français québécois, le franco-québécois or simply le québécois.

Although Quebec French is sometimes thought of as an almost exclusively non- standard variant, and certain aspects of it are sociolinguistically stigmatized, most aspects of Quebec French that distinguish it from the French of France are found throughout the different registers of speech and writing, including standard and formal usage.

Two similar but nonetheless distinct dialects tend to be confused with Quebec French. Those are Saguenay French , spoken in Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean, and Gaspésie French , in Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine .

1 History

Main article: History of Quebec French

Quebec French is substantially different in pronunciation and vocabulary to the other varieties of French spoken throughout the world, just as Portuguese, Spanish, and English language of the Americas are with respect to European dialects. However, in the case of Quebec French, the separation was increased by the reduction of cultural contacts with France after the Conquest of New France by Great Britain in 1759. The French RevolutionThe period of the French Revolution in the history of France covers the years between 1789 and 1799, in which democrats and republicans overthrew the absolute monarchy and the Roman Catholic Church perforce underwent radical restructuring. While France wo and its aftermath have substantially altered the French spoken in France, while Quebec conserved older forms.

2 Standardization

Although Quebec French constitutes a coherent and standard system, it has no objective norm since the very organization mandated to establish it, the Office québécois de la langue françaiseThe Office quebecois de la langue francaise (Quebec Office of the French language) was established on March 24, 1961 along with the Quebec ministry of Cultural affairs. Its mandate was enlarged by the 1977 Charter of the French Language, which also establ, believes that objectively standardizing the dialect would lead to reduced interintelligibility with other French communities around the world, linguistically isolating Quebecers and possibly causing the extinction of the French language in the Americas.

This governmental institution has nonetheless published many dictionaries and terminological guidelines since the 1960s, effectively allowing many Québécismes (French words local to Quebec) that either describe specifically North American realities or have been in use before the Conquest, and creating new, morphologically well-formed words to describe technological evolutions to which the Académie françaiseThe Academie francaise (French Academy) is the pre-eminent French learned body on matters pertaining to the French language. The Academie, limited to forty members, has the task of acting as an official authority on the language, even though it has no enf, the equivalent body governing French language in France, was extremely slow to react.

The effect, other historical factors helping, is a negative perception of Quebec French traits by Quebecers themselves, coupled with a desire to improve their language by conforming it to the Parisian French norm. This explains why most of the differences between Quebec and France French documented in this article are marked as "informal" or "colloquial". Those differences that are unmarked are most likely so just because they go unnoticed by most speakers.



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