Where does this complexity come from? The history of French

If French is so complicated today, it’s not an accident. It’s the result of centuries of evolution, linguistic mixing… and a certain linguistic elitism that made the language more rigid than it should be.
 

French: a linguistic melting pot

French is not a pure language, it’s a linguistic patchwork that evolved through invasions and foreign influences.
 

🔹 The Gauls (les Gaulois) spoke a Celtic language, but there’s almost nothing left of it in modern French.
 

🔹 The Romans (les Romains) imposed Latin – but not the classical Latin of great writers – rather a popular Latin, spoken by soldiers and merchants.
 

🔹 The Franks (les Francs), a Germanic people, conquered Gaul and left behind words and structures from their own language.
 

🔹 The Vikings, who settled in Normandy, brought words like flotte (fleet).
 

🔹 English left its mark after the Hundred Years’ War, and later through industrialization and globalization.
 

The result? French inherited Latin grammar rules, Germanic words, Celtic constructions, and modern anglicisms. This mix makes the language complex, full of irregularities and tricky exceptions.
 

📌 Example: Latin and Greek influences

You might have noticed that some scientific words in French come from Latin, while others come from Greek.
 

  • "hôpital" (from Latin hospitale) but "pharmacie" (from Greek pharmakon).
     
  • "dentiste" (from Latin dens, tooth) but "ophtalmologue" (from Greek ophtalmos, eye).
     
  • "roi" (from Latin rex) but "monarchie" (from Greek monos, alone + arkhein, to rule).
     

This double influence created many spelling and pronunciation exceptions, which explains why French spelling often seems to have no clear logic.
 

The Académie française: a barrier to simplification?

Another big issue: written French didn’t follow the evolution of spoken French.
 

👉 In the Middle Ages, people wrote the way they spoke.
 

👉 But starting in the Renaissance, intellectuals wanted to "ennoble" the language by making spelling more complex to give it a more "scholarly" look.
 

That’s when the Académie française came in.
 

Created in 1635 by Cardinal Richelieu, the Académie had a clear mission: standardize the French language and prevent it from evolving too freely. At the time, France was a linguistically divided country, with many regional dialects (picard, normand, occitan, breton, alsacien…), and even very different versions of French. The Académie’s role was to unify the language and give it prestige.
 

But instead of simplifying the language to make it more accessible, the Académie often made it more complicated.