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I'm confused ... if the Walloons are French-speaking, as this article says, then who speaks the
Walloon language? —
84.248.81.201
24 Nov
2005 19:22 (UTC)
was neither signed nor dated
The Walloon language is a language which is neither used in the administration or the common television. The Walloon language is divided in several quite different dialects and is therefore only very locally understandable. Many educated walloons born after the 1970s do not even know more than some simple words or idioms and are not fluent at all in this language. As the common people language before WWII, the Walloon language is nevertheless an important part of the Walloon cultural identity (if there exists any). —
131.220.68.177
8 Aug
2005 09:05 (UTC)
was neither signed nor dated
This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||
|
Archives ( Index) |
This page is archived by
ClueBot III.
|
I'm confused ... if the Walloons are French-speaking, as this article says, then who speaks the
Walloon language? —
84.248.81.201
24 Nov
2005 19:22 (UTC)
was neither signed nor dated
The Walloon language is a language which is neither used in the administration or the common television. The Walloon language is divided in several quite different dialects and is therefore only very locally understandable. Many educated walloons born after the 1970s do not even know more than some simple words or idioms and are not fluent at all in this language. As the common people language before WWII, the Walloon language is nevertheless an important part of the Walloon cultural identity (if there exists any). —
131.220.68.177
8 Aug
2005 09:05 (UTC)
was neither signed nor dated