Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at d'oc.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word d'Oc.

Examples

  • Viognier de Pennautier, Vin de Pays d'Oc, France 2010 £7.25, Berry Bros & Rudd, bbr.com Well-made Viognier has a languid charm that is hard to find in other varieties, a combination of floral and apricot flavours and generous fleshiness that can be irresistible.

    Wines of the week 2011

  • They sing mostly in Occitans, the native language of southern France also known as Langue d'Oc.

    Archive 2008-09-01 Walter Jon Williams 2008

  • They sing mostly in Occitans, the native language of southern France also known as Langue d'Oc.

    More Music Walter Jon Williams 2008

  • Formerly just the Languedoc—from Langue d'Oc, the local language—it stretched from Provence to the area between Toulouse and the eastern Pyrenees.

    The Templar Revelation Lynn Picknett 2004

  • This may be a reference in the punning, esoteric ‘language of the birds’ to the Pays d'Oc, but French researchers have identified this figure with the Syrian goddess Anath, who is in turn closely linked with Isis.4 And there is also the obvious association with the bird-footed Lilith.

    The Templar Revelation Lynn Picknett 2004

  • Formerly just the Languedoc—from Langue d'Oc, the local language—it stretched from Provence to the area between Toulouse and the eastern Pyrenees.

    The Templar Revelation Lynn Picknett 2004

  • This may be a reference in the punning, esoteric ‘language of the birds’ to the Pays d'Oc, but French researchers have identified this figure with the Syrian goddess Anath, who is in turn closely linked with Isis.4 And there is also the obvious association with the bird-footed Lilith.

    The Templar Revelation Lynn Picknett 2004

  • Simon recognized it at once, and he felt a little inner leap, because it was the tongue his parents spoke, the Langue d'Oc, the speech of Aquitaine,

    The Saracen: The Holy War Robert Shea 1963

  • These were the _Langue d'Oc_, or Provencal, the tongue of the South of France and of the adjoining regions of Spain and Italy; and the _Langue d'Oil_, or French proper, the language of the North.

    General History for Colleges and High Schools Philip Van Ness Myers

  • [Footnote 40: The word Oc, according to tradition, meant in the old patois of the country "yes:" hence the original derivation of "Langue d'Oc."]

    Itinerary of Provence and the Rhone Made During the Year 1819 John Hughes

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.