French orthography encompasses the spelling and punctuation of the French language. It is based on a combination of phonemic and historical principles. The spelling of words is largely based on the pronunciation of Old French âÂÂ1200 AD, and has stayed more or less the same since then, despite enormous changes to the pronunciation of the language in the intervening years. Even in the late 17th century, with the publication of the first French dictionary by the Académie française, there were attempts to reform French orthography.
This has resulted in a complicated relationship between spelling and sound, especially for vowels; a multitude of silent letters; and many homophones, e.g. ///// (all pronounced ) and // (all pronounced ). This is conspicuous in verbs: ' (you speak), ' (I speak / one speaks) and ' (they speak) all sound like . Later attempts to respell some words in accordance with their Latin etymologies further increased the number of silent letters (e.g., ' vs. older ' â compare English "tense", which reflects the original spelling â and ' vs. older ').
Nevertheless, the rules governing French orthography allow for a reasonable degree of accuracy when pronouncing unfamiliar French words from their written forms. The reverse operation, producing written forms from pronunciation, is much more ambiguous. The French alphabet uses a number of diacritics, including the circumflex, diaeresis, acute, and grave accents, as well as ligatures. A system of braille has been developed for people who are visually impaired.
The French alphabet is based on the 26 letters of the Latin alphabet, uppercase and lowercase, with five diacritics and two orthographic ligatures.
and are used only in loanwords and regional words. is usually written ; is usually written anywhere but before , before , and sometimes at the ends of words. However, is common in the metric prefix kilo- (originally from Greek khilia "a thousand"), e.g. , , , .
The diacritics used in French orthography are the acute accent (; ), the grave accent (; ), the circumflex (; ), the diaeresis (; ), and the cedilla (; ). Diacritics have no effect on the primary alphabetical order.
A tilde () above is occasionally used in French for words and names of Spanish origin that have been incorporated into the language (e.g., , ). Like the other diacritics, the tilde has no impact on the primary alphabetical order.
Diacritics are often omitted on capital letters, mainly for technical reasons (not present on AZERTY keyboards). However, many authorities, including the and the , reject this usage. The states that, because accents in French have full orthographic value and their absence can lead to misreading and mispronunciation, good typography must systematically use diacritics on capital letters. There is an exception for acronyms but not for abbreviations (e.g., , , but ). Nevertheless, diacritics are often ignored in word games, including crosswords, Scrabble, and .
The ligatures and are part of French orthography. For collation, these ligatures are treated like the sequences and respectively.
(, or ) is rare, appearing only in some words of Latin and Greek origin like , , , (as named dogâÂÂs parsley). It generally represents the vowel , like .
The sequence appears in loanwords where both sounds are heard, as in and .
(, or ) is a mandatory contraction of in certain words. Some of these are native French words, with the pronunciation or , e.g. "choir" , "heart" , "moods (related to moral)" , "knot" , "sister" , "egg" , "work (of art)" , "vow" . It usually appears in the combination ; "eye" is an exception. Many of these words were originally written with the digraph ; the in the ligature represents a sometimes artificial attempt to imitate the Latin spelling: > Old French / > Modern French .
is also used in words of Greek origin, as the Latin rendering of the Greek diphthong , e.g. "coelacanth". These words used to be pronounced with , but in recent years a spelling pronunciation with has taken hold, e.g. or , or etc. The pronunciation with is often seen to be more correct.
When is found after , the can be pronounced in some cases (), or in others ().
is not used when both letters contribute different sounds. For example, when is part of a prefix (), or when is part of a suffix (), or in the word and its derivatives.
French digraphs and trigraphs have both historical and phonological origins. In the first case, it is a vestige of the spelling in the word's original language (usually Latin or Greek) maintained in modern French, e.g. the use of in , in , or in . In the second case, a digraph is due to an archaic pronunciation, such as , , , , and , or is merely a convenient way to expand the twenty-six-letter alphabet to cover all relevant phonemes, as in , , , , , and . Some cases are a mixture of these or are used for purely pragmatic reasons, such as for in ('he ate'), where the serves to indicate a "soft" inherent in the verb's root, similar to the significance of a cedilla to .
Some exceptions apply to the rules governing the pronunciation of word-final consonants. See Liaison (French) for details.
The spelling of French words of Greek origin is complicated by a number of digraphs which originated in the Latin transcriptions. The digraphs normally represent , respectively, in Greek loanwords; and the ligatures and in Greek loanwords represent the same vowel as (). Further, many words in the international scientific vocabulary were constructed in French from Greek roots and have kept their digraphs (e.g. , ).
The Oaths of Strasbourg from 842 is the earliest text written in the early form of French called Romance or Gallo-Romance.
The Celtic Gaulish language of the inhabitants of Gaul disappeared progressively over the course of Roman rule as the Latin language began to replace it. Vulgar Latin, a generally lower register of Classical Latin spoken by the Roman soldiers, merchants and even by patricians in quotidian speech, was adopted by the natives and evolved slowly, taking the forms of different spoken Roman vernaculars according to the region of the empire.
Eventually the different forms of Vulgar Latin in what is now France evolved into three branches in the Gallo-Romance language sub-family, the north of the Loire, the in the south, and the Franco-Provençal languages in part of the east.
In the 9th century, the Romance vernaculars were already quite far from Latin. For example, to understand the Bible, written in Latin, footnotes were necessary. The languages found in the manuscripts dating from the 9th century to the 13th century form what is known as Old French (). With consolidation of royal power, beginning in the 13th century, the vernacular, the variety then in usage in the ÃÂle-de-France (region around Paris), took, little by little, over the other languages and evolved toward Classic French. These languages continued to evolve until Middle French () emerged, in the 14th century to the 16th century.
During the Middle French period (âÂÂ1600), modern spelling practices were largely established. This happened especially during the 16th century, under the influence of printers. The overall trend was towards continuity with Old French spelling, although some changes were made under the influence of changed pronunciation habits; for example, the Old French distinction between the diphthongs and was eliminated in favor of consistent , as both diphthongs had come to be pronounced or (depending on the surrounding sounds). However, many other distinctions that had become equally superfluous were maintained, e.g. between and soft or between and . It is likely that etymology was the guiding factor here: the distinctions and reflect corresponding distinctions in the spelling of the underlying Latin words, whereas no such distinction exists in the case of .
This period also saw the development of some explicitly etymological spellings, e.g. ("time"), ("twenty") and ("weight") (note that in many cases, the etymologizing was sloppy or occasionally completely incorrect; reflects Latin , with the in the wrong place, and actually comes from Latin , with no at all; the spelling is due to an incorrect derivation from Latin ). The trend towards etymologizing sometimes produced absurd (and generally rejected) spellings such as for normal ("to know"), which attempted to combine Latin ("to be wise", the correct origin of ) with ("to know").
Modern French spelling was codified in the late 17th century by the Académie française, based largely on previously established spelling conventions. Some reforms have occurred since then, but most have been fairly minor. The most significant changes have been:
In October 1989, Michel Rocard, then-Prime Minister of France, established the High Council of the French Language () in Paris. He designated experts among them linguists, representatives of the Académie française and lexicographers to propose standardizing several points, a few of those points being:
Quickly, the experts set to work. Their conclusions were submitted to Belgian and Québécois linguistic political organizations. They were likewise submitted to the Académie française, which endorsed them unanimously, saying: "Current orthography remains that of usage, and the 'recommendations' of the High Council of the French language only enter into play with words that may be written in a different manner without being considered as incorrect or as faults."
The changes were published in the in December 1990. At the time the proposed changes were considered to be suggestions. In 2016, schoolbooks in France began to use the newer recommended spellings, with instruction to teachers that both old and new spellings be deemed correct.
In France, Belgium, Canada and Switzerland, the exclamation mark, question mark, semicolon, colon, percentage mark, currency symbols, hash, and guillemet all require a thin space between the punctuation mark and the material it adjoins. Computer software may aid or hinder the application of this rule, depending on the degree of localisation, as it is marked differently from most other Western punctuation.
The hyphen in French has a particular use in geographic names that is not found in English. Traditionally, the "specific" part of placenames, street names, and organization names are hyphenated (usually namesakes). For instance, (Square of the Battle of Stalingrad []); and (named after Blaise Pascal). Likewise, Pas-de-Calais is a French department; the eponymous (strait) is .
This rule is not uniformly observed in official names, e.g., either or , and usually has no hyphens. The names of Montreal Metro stations are consistently hyphenated when suitable, but those of Paris Métro stations mostly ignore this rule. (For more examples, see .)