Sercquiais

Sercquiais (French pronunciation: [sɛʁkjɛ]), also known as lé Sèrtchais, Sarkese or Sark-French, is the Norman dialect of the Channel Island of Sark (Bailiwick of Guernsey).

Sercquiais
Sarkese, Sark-French
sercquiais, lé sèrtchais
Native toSark
Native speakers
3 (2022)[1]
Early forms
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone
Linguasphere51-AAA-hcf
IETFnrf-CQ[4]
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Sercquiais is a descendant of the 16th century Jèrriais used by the original colonists,[5] 40 families mostly from Saint Ouen, Jersey[1] who settled the then uninhabited island, although influenced in the interim by Guernésiais (the dialect of Guernsey). It is also closely related to the now-extinct Auregnais (Alderney) dialect, as well as to Continental Norman. It is still spoken by older inhabitants of the island and most of the local placenames are in Sercquiais.

In former times, there may have been two subdialects of Sercquiais, but today the dialect is relatively homogeneous.[5] The phonology of the language retains features lost in Jèrriais since the 16th century.

Written Sercquiais

Relatively little Sercquiais has been transcribed, and as there is no widely accepted form, it has received a certain amount of stigma as a result. A notable ruler of Sark, Sibyl Hathaway, who was a speaker herself, proclaimed that it could "never be written down", and this perception has continued in the years since.

The earliest published text in Sercquiais so far identified is the Parable of the Sower (Parabol du smeaux) from the Gospel of Matthew. Prince Louis Lucien Bonaparte, linguist, visited the Channel Islands in September 1862 in order to transcribe samples of the insular language varieties, which he subsequently published in 1863:

(3) [...] L'chen qui sème s'n allit s'mai;
(4) Et tàndis qu' i s'maitt une partie d' la s'menche quitt le long du ch'mìnn et l's oesiaux du ciel vìndrint et i la màndgirent.
(5) Une aûtre quitt dans d's endréts roquieurs, où alle n'avait pas fort de terre; et ou l'vist ossivite, parçe que la terre où al' 'tait n'était pas ben avant.
(6) Mais l'solé se l'vitt et ou fut brulaie; et coumme ou n'avait pas d'rachinnes, ou s'quitt.
(7) Une aûtre quitt dans d's épinnes, et l's épinnes vìndrent à craitre, et l'etoupidrent.
(8) Une aûtre enfin quitt dans d'bouanne terre, et ou portit du fritt; quiq' grâins rèndirent chent pour un, d'aûtres sessànte, et d'aûtres trente.
(9) L'chen qu'a d's oureilles pour ouit qu' il ouêt. (S. Makyu. Chap. XIII. 3–9)

Which in the NIV is translated as:

(3) "[...] A farmer went out to sow his seed.
(4) As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up.
(5) Some fell on rocky places, where it did not have much soil. It sprang up quickly, because the soil was shallow.
(6) But when the sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had no root.
(7) Other seed fell among thorns, which grew up and choked the plants.
(8) Still other seed fell on good soil, where it produced a crop — a hundred, sixty or thirty times what was sown.
(9) He who has ears, let him hear."

Present

As of 2022, Sercquiais had three native speakers.[6] The Czech linguist Martin Neudörfl has been trying to preserve the language by teaching it to children.[6][7] He has also conducted many tests, and created hundreds of hours of recordings, so that audio of [pronunciation and rhythm — how the language sounds — is preserved.[6] Since 2019, the language has been taught in schools.[6]

Phonology

Sercquiais Consonants[8]
LabialAlveolarPost-
alveolar
PalatalVelar/
uvular
Nasalmnɲ
Plosivevoicelessptk
voicedbdɡʲɡ
Fricativevoicelessfsʃ
voicedvzʒʁ
Rhoticr
Laterallʎ
Approximantplainj
labialɥw
Sercquiais Oral Vowels
 FrontBack
unroundedrounded
Closei y u
Open-midɛ ɛːœ œːɔ ɔː
Opena
Diphthong
Nasal Vowels
FrontBack
unroundedrounded
Close-mid ẽːø̃ ø̃ːõ õː
Open-midɛ̃ ɛ̃ː
Openɑ̃ ɑ̃ː
(Note: Sercquiais not possessing a standard orthography, examples are given according to Liddicoat's Lexicon of Sark Norman French, Munich 2001)

Sercquiais does not have the voiced dental fricative which is such a distinctive characteristic of St. Ouen in Jersey where most of the colonists came from.

SercquiaisJèrriaisEnglishFrench
lyerliétheto readlire
kuoradjcouothagecouragecourage
ferefétherto ironrepasser (ferrer: to clad in iron)

Palatalisation of velars /k/ and /ɡ/ (see Joret line) is less fully developed in Sercquiais than in Jèrriais. Palatalisation in Jèrriais of /k/ to [tʃ] and /ɡ/ to [dʒ] has the equivalent in Sercquiais of /kj/ and /ɡj/. For example, hiccup is hitchet in Jèrriais and hekyet in Sercquiais; war is respectively dgèrre and gyer.

Palatalisation of /tj/ in Jèrriais leads to [tʃ], but in Sercquiais /t/ is generally retained: profession, trade in Sercquiais is meeti, whereas Jèrriais has palatalised to mêtchi.

[dʒ] is retained in Sercquiais where Jèrriais has reduced to [ʒ], as in to eat: mãdji (Sercquiais) – mangi (Jèrriais).

Final consonants of masculine nouns in the singular are in free variation with null in all positions except in liaison. Final consonants are usually pronounced at ends of phrases. Final consonants are always lost in plural forms of masculine nouns. A cat may therefore be kat or ka in Sercquiais, but cats are kaa. For comparison, Jèrriais cat is usually pronounced /ka/, and the plural has the long vowel as in Sercquiais. It can also therefore be seen that length is phonemic and may denote plurality.

Sercquiais has also retained final consonants that have been entirely lost in Jèrriais, such as final /t/ in pret (meadowpré in Jèrriais as in French).

Metathesis of /r/ is uncommon in Sercquiais, and in Jèrriais, by comparison with Guernésiais.

SercquiaisJèrriaisGuernésiaisEnglish
krweecrouaixkérouaïecross
mekrëdiMêcrédiméquerdiWednesday

The palatalised l, which in Jèrriais has been generally palatalised to /j/ in initial position and following a consonant, is maintained in Sercquiais.

SercquiaisJèrriais
(li representing /j/)
English
blyakyĩbliatchînshoe polish (blacking)
klyütcliupatch
plyechipliaichito place
lyefliefroof

Gemination occurs regularly in verb conjugations and gerunds, as in Jèrriais but in distinction to Guernésiais.

SercquiaisJèrriaisGuernésiaisEnglish
machunniimachonn'niemachounn'riemasonry
dje dmãddejé d'mand'daije d'mànd'raiI'll ask

However, Sercquiais does not geminate palatal fricatives, unlike Jèrriais:

SercquiaisJèrriaisEnglish
brachiibrach'chiebrewery
brachiibrachiearmful
mãdjimangito eat
mãdjimang'gieeating

In the second half of the 19th century the language changed considerably. We can observe this in the 40 idiolects that can be heard today. An important part of the language is the usage of diphthongs, which affects the pronunciation. It is unclear how words are pronounced because there are many possible ways to pronounce them depending on where they are in the phrase. It is important to codify the language since not even the native speakers follow all the rules.[9]

Conjugation of verbs

The St. Ouennais origins of Sercquiais can be seen in the 2nd and 3rd person plural forms of the preterite. Sercquiais uses an ending -dr which is typical of the St. Ouennais dialect of Jèrriais, but generally not used elsewhere in Jersey (nor nowadays by younger speakers in St. Ouen).

SercquiaisJèrriais
(St. Ouennais)
standard JèrriaisEnglish
i vuliidri' voulîdrenti' voulîtentthey wanted
uu paaliidrou pâlîdresou pâlîtesyou spoke
i füüdri' fûdrenti' fûtentthey were
uu prẽẽdrou prîndresou prîntesyou took

See also

Footnotes

References

External links