On Sat, Mar 04, 2006 at 03:13:26PM -0800, Erik Steffl wrote:
Well,
there's a reason they call it the linuga-franca.
French once was, and may yet be again.
nitpicking: don't think 'franca' stands for french, see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingua_franca (I'm not 100% sure whether
you were implying franca stands for french or simply that franch was
lingua franca once)
There is a least a very strong connection. The German name for France
is 'Frankreich' - empire of the Franks - while the Wikipedia refers
to 'Frankish Language'.
French used the be the lingua franca in 'better circles' in most of
Europe, and also in diplomacy. One remaining trace of this is seen
in diplomatic protocol: when countries are ordered alphabetically,
this is still done using their french names.
It was a recurring pain for the English during WW II that in
neutral countries 'Allemagne' came before 'Angleterre' :-)
--
FA