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Langue d'oc   Listen
noun
Langue d'oc  n.  The dialect, closely akin to French, formerly spoken south of the Loire (in which the word for "yes" was oc); Provençal.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Langue d'oc" Quotes from Famous Books



... for though Nyons is geographically in Dauphine, climatically and racially it is in Provence. In Southern France the "Langue d'Oil," the literary language of Paris and Northern France, has never succeeded in ousting the "Langue d'Oc," the language of the Troubadours. From hearing so much Provencal talked round me, I could not help picking up some of it. It was years before I could rid myself of the habit of inquiring quezaco? instead of "qu'est ce que c'est?" ...
— The Days Before Yesterday • Lord Frederick Hamilton

... language was divided into two dialects. The river Loire was their common boundary. In the provinces to the south of that river the affirmative, YES, was expressed by the word oc; in the north it was called oil (oui); and hence Dante has named the southern language langue d'oc, and the northern langue d'oil. The latter, which was carried into England by the Normans, and is the origin of the present French, may be called the French Romane; and the former the Provencal, or Provencial Romane, because it was spoken by the people of ...
— Bulfinch's Mythology • Thomas Bulfinch

... word Oc, according to tradition, meant in the old patois of the country "yes:" hence the original derivation of "Langue d'Oc."] ...
— Itinerary of Provence and the Rhone - Made During the Year 1819 • John Hughes

... employed by some one who would have made it seem ugly, as he did who translated the Latin of the "Ethics," I endeavoured to employ it, trusting in myself more than in any other. Again, I was moved to defend it from its numerous accusers, who depreciate it and commend others, especially the Langue d'Oc, saying, that the latter is more beautiful and better than this, therein deviating from the truth. For by this Commentary the great excellence of our common Lingua di Si will appear, since through it, most lofty and most original ideas may be as ...
— The Banquet (Il Convito) • Dante Alighieri



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