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lateinischfranzösischen

Lateinischfranzösischen is a term used in linguistics and philology to describe phenomena that arise from contact between Latin and French in historical contexts. The conventional form is lateinisch-französisch, with the inflected adjectival form appearing as lateinischfranzösischen in sentences, for example to modify a plural noun in the accusative or dative, such as die lateinischfranzösischen Texte.

The term denotes features, influences, or text types that exhibit mixed Latin and French elements. It is

Typical manifestations include macaronic texts that blend Latin and French within a single line or paragraph,

See also: macaronic language, bilingualism, language contact, medieval Latin literature, Old and Middle French.

not
a
separate
language,
but
a
description
of
language
contact.
It
is
commonly
applied
in
studies
of
medieval
Europe,
where
Latin
remained
the
language
of
scholarship,
liturgy,
and
administration
while
French
emerged
as
a
prominent
vernacular
in
many
regions.
In
such
contexts,
bilingual
or
multilingual
practices
produced
hybrid
forms
in
vocabulary,
morphology,
syntax,
and
orthography.
mixed
glossaries
or
scholastic
works,
and
religious
or
legal
documents
that
incorporate
French
terms
into
Latin
prose
or
vice
versa.
Lexical
borrowings,
calques,
and
occasional
cross-language
inflection
illustrate
the
range
of
lateinischfranzösischen
phenomena.
Scholars
use
the
term
to
describe
broader
language-contact
patterns
rather
than
to
propose
a
distinct
linguistic
system.