Occitan language

Occitan—also called Lenga d'Òc, Langue d'Oc or Provençal—(in its own language: occitan, lenga d'òc and sometimes provençau/provençal ) is a Romance language spoken in a territory called Occitania, which comprises southern France, Monaco, part of Italy (the Occitan Valleys) and part of Spain (the Aran Valley).

Status and use
This minority language has the status of an official language in Spain (see Aranese Occitan) and of a protected language in Italy. It has no official status in France, nor in Monaco. Its usage is quite limited compared to dominant state languages such as French, Italian and Spanish.

Nowadays, Occitan enjoys a dynamic movement of cultural defense and modern creativity, especially in literature and music. Occitan literature has been famous and uninterrupted since the 10th century, including the troubadours of the Middle Ages, a baroque period, Frederic Mistral's Nobel prize in 1904 and a constant renewal nowadays.

Dialects and standardization
The main Occitan dialects are:
 * Provençal (including Niçard) in the south-east
 * Vivaro-Alpine in the north-east
 * Auvernhat in the center-north
 * Lemosin in the north-west
 * Gascon (including Aranese) in the south-west
 * Lengadocian in the center and the center-south.

All dialects are integrated into and respected in the ongoing standardization process (which has not been fully implemented yet). Therefore, Occitan tends to work as a pluricentric language: this means that Standard Occitan (occitan estandard or occitan larg, i.e. 'Wide Occitan') comprises converging, regional modalities. Between them, the central Lengadocian dialect is the basis of the default modality of Standard Occitan: it is suitable for learners who don't become attached to any particular regional modality. The regional modalities of Standard Occitan are suitable for learners who have special ties with one region; those regional modalities are a little more varied than, for instance, British English, American English and Australian English but they remain fully and easily understandable for users of all regions.

Classification
Among the Romance languages, the closest relative of Occitan is Catalan. According to linguist Bierre Bec, Occitan and Catalan form a very compact Romance subgroup, and even a common diasystem, called Occitano-Romance. It is an overlap of (or a bridge between) two larger Romance subgroups: Gallo-Romance (including French, Francoprovençal, Romansh, Ladin, Friulian and Northern Italian) and Ibero-Romance (including Aragonese, Spanish, Asturian-Leonese and Galician-Portuguese). It has to be said that Aragonese itself is more and more viewed as a bridge between Occitano-Romance and Ibero-Romance proper.

The term Lenga d'Òc is misleadingly associated with the term Langue d'Oïl (that is French). Therefore many people believe erroneously that Lenga d'Òc and Langue d'Oïl would be the two faces of a same, common language which would be 'French'. In fact, all specialists agree that Occitan does not belong to French and is very much closer to Catalan. The Òc-Oïl false myth is a late distortion of Dante's naming for Italian ('language of sì'), Occitan ('language of òc') and French ('language of oïl') (see name).

Phonology
In this section, default forms are typical of general, standard Occitan (based on the central, Lengadocian dialect) but main regional variations are also presented.

Stress
The stress has a limited mobility. It can fall:
 * on the last syllable.
 * on the penult.
 * only in some far eastern varieties (Niçard and Eastern Alpine), on the antepenult.

Vocals
In some regional varieties, the phonemes /œ/ and /ə/ are also used.

It is worth of mention that there is vocalic alternation. In an unstressed syllable, and before a stressed syllable, some vocals are impossible and switch to closer vocals: After a stressed syllable, in a word ending, the unstressed phoneme /a/ has evolved toward /ɔ/ in modern Occitan. For instance taula ('table') is pronounced [ˈtawlɔ] (only a few local varieties keep /a/ in this position, as in Old Occitan: taula [ˈtawla]).
 * Stressed è /ɛ/ switches to unstressed e /e/.
 * Stressed ò /ɔ/ switches to unstressed o /u/.

Consonants
In some regional varieties, the phonemes /ʀ/, /h/ and /ʒ/ are also used.

Distinction between /v/ and /b/ is general in the northern and eastern dialects (Provençal, Vivaro-Alpine, Auvernhat and Lemosin). In the central and southwestern dialects (Lengadocian and Gascon) the phonemes /b/ and /v/ are merged into /b/ (so /v/ has disappeared).

In the central and southwestern dialects (Lengadocian and Gascon), the phonemes /b/, /d/ and /g/ have various phonetic realizations. They are occlusive by default: [b], [d], [g]. They are fricative when they are in contact with [r], [l] or [z] and when they are between two vowels: in those cases /b/ is pronounced [β], /d/ is pronounced [ð] and /g/ is pronounced [ɣ].

Spelling and pronunciation
Occitan uses the following version of the Latin alphabet with twenty-three letters:
 * A B C D E F G H I J L M N O P Q R S T U V X Z

The letter names are the following:
 * A (a), B (be nauta, be auta), C (ce), D (de), E (e), F (èfa), G (ge), H (acha), I (i), J (ji), L (èla), M (èma), N (èna), O (o), P (pe), Q (cu), R (èrra), S (èssa), T (te), U (u), V (ve bassa, in Gascon ve baisha), X (ixa), Z (izèda).

The letters K (ca), W (ve dobla) and Y (i grèga) have their usual place in the alphabet, but are restricted to words of foreign origin.

Some letters bear the following diacritic marks, which are mandatory on uppercases and lowercases: Pronunciation rules are explained in the following table.
 * The acute accent (accent agut), on á, é, ó, í, ú, indicates stressed, close vowels.
 * The grave accent (accent grèu), on à, è, ò, indicates stressed, open vowels.
 * The cedilla (cedilha), on ç, indicates that ç is pronounced [s], not [k].
 * The dieresis (trèma), on ï, ü, indicates that ï and ü are pronounced separately from a previous letter.
 * The interpunct (ponch interior, punt interior), on n·h, s·h, indicates a distinction between n·h and nh or s·h and sh.

There are some particular, regional pronunciation rules.
 * In Lemosin Occitan, a vowel followed by s, at the end of a syllable, produces long vowels or diphthongs, in a lot of words: as [aː], es [ej], is [iː], òs [ɔː], os [uː], us [yː].
 * In Auvernhat Occitan, most consonants (except r) are palatalized when placed before i [i] and u [y]: b [b > bj] — qu(i), c(u) [k > kj] — ch [ts > tʃ] — d [d > dj] — f [f > fj] — gu(i), g(u) [g > gj] — g(i), j(u) [dz > dʒ] — tg(i), tj(u) [dz > dʒ] — l [l > lj] — m [m > mj] — n [n > nj] — p [p > pj] — s [s > ʃ] — ss (between vowels) [s > ʃ] — c(i), ç(u) [s > ʃ] — z [z > ʒ] — s (between vowels) [z > ʒ]. This Auvernhat phenomenon also occurs in English, with the palatal pronunciation of consonants in words such as cute [ˈkjuːt], tube [ˈtjuːb], election [ɪˈlekʃn], picture [ˈpɪktʃə(ɹ)], mission [ˈmɪʃn], sure [ˈʃʊə(ɹ)], pleasure [ˈpleʒə(ɹ)].
 * A nasal consonant such as n, m can nasalize more or less a previous vowel, at the end of a syllable, in some dialects (Lemosin, Auvernhat, Vivaro-Alpine, Provençal): dança [ˈdansɔ > ˈdaⁿsɔ > ˈdãsɔ] 'dance'; volèm [vuˈlɛn > vuˈlɛⁿ > vuˈlẽ] 'we want'.
 * In Lengadocian Occitan, [ps], [ts] and [ks] are often merged into [ts]: còps [ˈkɔps > ˈkɔts] 'times', sacs [ˈsaks > ˈsats] 'bags', occitan [uksiˈta > utsiˈta], Mexic [mekˈsik > meˈtsik] 'Mexico'.

Name
Occitan is nowadays the most frequently used name for the language. This name appeared between 1290 and 1300, perhaps as early as 1271 in texts written in Latin under forms such as occitanus, lingua occitana, simultaneously with the territory name Occitania (Occitania in Latin and English, Occitània in Occitan). It is thought that Occitania was created from òc (that is lenga d'òc) and the ending of the territory name [Aqu]itania. The terms Occitan and Occitania used to belong to a learned register for a long time but they have gained a wide usage since the second half of the 20th century.

The term Lenga d'Òc means 'language of òc', òc being the way of saying 'yes' (it may be said in English Lenga d'Òc as in Occitan or Langue d'Oc as in French). Lenga d'Òc is known in texts at least from 1291 on and is the likely etymology of Oc[citan]. Notably, Lenga d'Òc was spread from De vulgari eloquentia (1303-1305), the famous essay of Italian writer Dante Alighieri, where three Romance languages were identified by the way of saying 'yes': 'language of òc' (Occitan), 'language of sì' (Italian) and 'language of oïl' (French).

The term Provençal (provençau, provençal in Modern Occitan; proençal, proensal in Old Occitan) appeared around 1240. It referred to the medieval remembrance of the large Roman territory called Provincia Romana which encompassed Provence and Languedoc, that is a large part of Occitania. Italian authors, which were influenced by the high prestige of Medieval Occitan, helped the spread of the name Provençal since Provence is the closest region of Occitania from an Italian perspective. In traditional Romance linguistics, Provençal was the most used term for the whole language before it was replaced by Occitan in the second half of the 20th century. A large part of Occitan-speaking people do not live in Provence and therefore can hardly identify themselves as 'Provençal-speakers', so the spread of the term 'Occitan' has been viewed as a more neutral naming solution which does not favors any particular region. Nowadays, the term Provençal is mostly used to designate the Occitan dialect of Provence rather than the whole Occitan language.

The following terms are no longer in use to designate Occitan as a whole.
 * Some medieval authors, especially of the 13th century, also called the language roman, lenga romana. It was a way of highlighting the rise of Occitan ('Roman') as a prestigious, written language in front of 'Latin'. Roman underlined the clear consciousness of the Romance origin of Occitan at this time, albeit comparative linguistics did not exist yet.
 * The term Lemosin (lemosin in Modern occitan; lemosin, lemosi in Old Occitan) appeared between 1190 and 1213. It was used mostly during the 13th century because some famous troubadours were originary from Limousin. During the 18th and the 19th century, some learned persons took again the name llemosí in order to call the Catalan language in reference to the role of medieval Occitan in the birth of Catalan literature. Nowadays Lemosin only designates the Occitan dialect of Limousin and northern Périgord.
 * The term Gascon used to designate sometimes the whole Occitan language during the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries. At this time, Gascony was a major center of Occitan literature and Gascon people used to represent more or less Southern France (that is Occitania) in the eyes of northern French people. Nowadays Gascon only designates the Occitan dialect of Gascony and Bearn.