French Flemish
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Low Franconian

Low Franconian/Ripuarian

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French Flemish (Dutch: Frans-Vlaams, occasionally used in English) is spoken in the north of contemporary France and is considered part of the West Flemish dialect of the Dutch language. Placenames testify of the dialect being spoken since the 8th century in the area that was ceded to France in the 17th century and became known as French Flanders. Its dialect subgroup called French Flemish meanwhile became a minority dialect that survives mainly between Dunkirk (Duinkerke in Dutch), Bourbourg, Calais (Kales in Dutch), Saint-Omer and Bailleul (Belle in Dutch). It has about 20,000 daily users, and twice that number of occasional speakers.[1]

Historic regression of Dutch in the Western periphery. The blue line indicates the situation in the 7th-8th C.; the red line marks the situation during the 20th C.; the black line is the actual French-Belgian border.
Historic regression of Dutch in the Western periphery.
The blue line indicates the situation in the 7th-8th C.; the red line marks the situation during the 20th C.; the black line is the actual French-Belgian border.

See also

External links

Wikipedia
West Flemish edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Flemish in France". UOC, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (Open University of Catalonia), subsite Euromosaic - Research Centre of Multilingualism. Retrieved on 14 January 2007.
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