- Chiac
-
Acadian,Chiac, Shiak, Chiak Chiac Spoken in Canada Region Acadian communities throughout the Maritime provinces, mainly around Moncton, Shediac and Memramcook Native speakers Unknown (date missing) Language family Indo-European- Italic
- Romance
- Western
- Gallo-Iberian
- Gallo-Romance
- Gallo-Rhaetian
- Oïl
- French
- Canadian French
- Acadian,Chiac, Shiak, Chiak
- Canadian French
- French
- Oïl
- Gallo-Rhaetian
- Gallo-Romance
- Gallo-Iberian
- Western
- Romance
Language codes ISO 639-3 – Linguasphere 51-AAA-am Chiac is a contact language consisting of Acadian French heavily mixed and structured with English. It is spoken as the native and dominant language of most[citation needed] Acadians in southeast New Brunswick, especially among youth, near Moncton, Dieppe, Memramcook and Shediac. It is a more recent development of the French language, spurred by exposure to dominant English language media (radio, television, internet) and increased urbanization to Moncton and contact with the dominant Anglophone community in the area since the 1960s especially. The word itself is generally considered a derivation of the name "Shediac", a town in the area.[citation needed]
The roots and base of Chiac are Acadian French, a spoken French often tinged with nautical terms (e.g. haler, embarquer), reflecting the historic importance of the sea to the local economy, as well as older French words (e.g., bailler, quérir, hucher, gosier), many deemed archaic by the Académie Française, testimony to three centuries of relative isolation of Acadian communities from French influence. The collected works of Goncourt Prize-winner Antonine Maillet, and her play La Sagouine in particular, illustrate very well this variation of French. What sets Chiac apart from Acadian French is that it is a vernacular French mixed with English. It uses primarily French syntax with French-English vocabulary and phrase forms (see below). It is often deprecated by both French and English speakers as an ill-conceived hybrid — either "bad" French or "bad" English.[citation needed] See franglais for a wider discussion of this phenomenon.
Chiac has been embraced in recent years by some Acadian groups as a living and evolving language, and part of their collective culture. Acadian writers, poets and musicians such as France Daigle, Zero Celsius, Paul Bossé,[1] Fayo[2] and 1755[3] have produced works in Chiac.
Recently, Chiac has also made its way onto local television with Acadieman, a comedy about "The world's first Acadian Superhero" by Dano Leblanc.[4] The animated series, also a comic book, contains a mixture of Anglophone, Francophone, and "Chiacophone" characters. The popular Acadian rap group Radio Radio have also raised the profile of Chiac by rapping almost exclusively in that language. "Acadian" French has been greatly influenced by Chiac as it has spread especially among the younger generations.
Contents
Films
- Éloge du chiac, by Michel Brault, NFB, 1969 (27 minutes)[5]
- Éloge du chiac Part II, by Marie Cadieux, 2009 (77 minutes)[6]
External links
- "Et si on parlait chiac ? (How about speaking Chiac?)". November 4, 1998. http://classic-web.archive.org/web/20080227133901/webetab.ac-bordeaux.fr/Etablissement/TDereme/Options/Acadie/Acadie18.htm. Retrieved 2011-06-14.
- Je suis acadien - an example of Chiac
- The Chiac verb particle construction - A linguistics paper (beginning on page 56 of the pdf document) examining certain features of Chiac grammar.
- Music video for Radio Radio's song "Jacuzzi", with captions.
See also
- Gøtudanskt - Danish language as spoken in the Faroe Islands
- Portuñol - A mixed language that combines Spanish and Portuguese and is spoken in border areas of various countries (such as Brazil and Uruguay, Spain and Portugal) where the two languages co-exist.
- Jopará - a mixed language spoken in Paraguay which combines Spanish and Guaraní
- Russenorsk - a pidgin language that combines elements of Russian and Norwegian
- Surzhyk - an interlanguage derived from Ukrainian and Russian, spoken in Ukraine
- Trasianka - an interlanguage derived from Belarussian and Russian, spoken in Belarus
- Balachka - dialects of Kuban Cossacks
- Russification - the policy of introduction of Russian language into non-Russian communities
- Diglossia - a situation of parallel usage of two closely related languages, one of which is generally used by the government and in formal texts, and the other one is usually the spoken informally
References
- ^ Manning, Joanna (2006-12-14). "High-flying literature". Telegraph-Journal: p. D3
- ^ Laberge, Corinne (2007-06-28). "Le monde de Fayo". http://www.citesnouvelles.com/article-125172-Le-monde-de-Fayo.html. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
- ^ Elsliger, Lise (2007-06-26). "Acadian band 1755 together again". http://www.herenb.com/mn/front/article/37407. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
- ^ C'est la vie. 2006-12-08.
- ^ IMDB
- ^ Onesheet
Varieties of the French language Africa Americas ElsewhereSt.-Bart’s PatoisAsia Europe FranceElsewhereSee also French-based creole languages by continent Africa Americas Haitian (kreyòl ayisyen) · Lanc-Patuá · Antillean (Saint Lucian) · Louisiana (Kréyol La Lwizyàn) · French GuiananOceania Acadia History People and culture Language and education Related Category Portal Categories:- Language articles with undated speaker data
- French language
- Languages of Canada
- French dialects
- Acadian culture
- Italic
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.