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Cauchois dialect
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Cauchois (; ) is one of the eastern dialects of the that is spoken in and takes its name from the Pays de Caux region of the department.


Status
The Pays de Caux is one of the remaining strongholds of the Norman language outside the . Statistics give a wide range of interpretations as to numbers of speakers: between 0.3%INSEE/INED, 1999 and 19.1% La Langue vivante, Thierry Bulot, 2006 of residents of Seine-Maritime identify themselves as speakers of Cauchois.


Phonology
These are some distinguishing features of Cauchois from other Norman dialects:
  • the absence of /h/
  • the loss of /r/ between vowels
  • a greater tendency to metathesis than in western dialects: e(u)j instead of jé (English I), eud instead of dé ( of), euq instead of qué ( that), eul instead of lé ( the)


Literature
The Purin literature of the 17th and 18th centuries, published in , is the earliest Norman literature displaying Cauchois features. La Normandie dialectale, René Lepelley, Caen 1999, However, the Norman literary revival, which started in the Channel Islands and Cotentin in the 19th century, was not reflected in the Pays de Caux until the early 20th century. From 1910 onwards, a range of literature was produced; one of the features of Norman literature characteristic of Cauchois literature was the mixture of French and Norman. In Lower Normandy, Norman literature since the revival period has tended to be as exclusively Norman as possible. In the Pays de Caux, by contrast, alongside literature written exclusively in Cauchois, a genre of literature developed in which narrative is written in and dialogue in Cauchois, or dialogue is written in French or Cauchois, according to the language of the character.

Notable writers in Cauchois include (author of the Thanase Pèqueu stories), Ernest Morel, Gaston Demongé, Maurice Le Sieutre and Marceau Rieul. Jehan Le Povremoyne (pseudonym of Ernest Coquin) wrote stories of the mixed dialogue genre, as did Raymond Mensire.


See also
  • List of Norman language writers

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