The word 'French' encapsulates one of history's great linguistic paradoxes: a Romance language — descended from Latin — bears the name of a Germanic tribe, the Franks, who conquered Gaul but ultimately adopted the language of the people they ruled.
The English word 'French' comes from Old English 'Frencisc,' an adjective meaning 'Frankish, of the Franks.' This derived from the tribal name 'Franca' (Frank), which entered Old English through direct contact with the Frankish kingdom. The Proto-Germanic root is *frankōn, most likely meaning 'javelin' or 'lance' — the Franks may have been 'the javelin people,' named for their characteristic weapon, the francisca (a throwing axe) or the ango (a barbed javelin). The connection between the tribal name and a weapon has parallels in other Germanic ethnonyms: the Saxons are named from 'seax' (a short sword) and the Lombards possibly from 'long beards' or 'long halberds
An alternative etymology connects 'Frank' to Proto-Germanic *frankaz, meaning 'free' or 'bold.' However, most modern scholars believe this meaning developed secondarily from the tribal name rather than producing it: because the Franks were the ruling class of post-Roman Gaul, 'frank' came to mean 'free' (as only the Franks had full legal freedom), rather than the Franks being named because they were free. This semantic development was enormously productive: it gave English 'frank' (candid, honest — speaking like a free person), 'franchise' (a freedom, privilege, or right), and 'franc' (the French currency, from the inscription 'Francorum Rex,' King of the Franks, on the first coins).
The Franks were a confederation of West Germanic tribes who coalesced along the lower and middle Rhine in the 3rd century CE. Under Clovis I (c. 466–511), they conquered most of Roman Gaul and established the Merovingian kingdom. The Franks were relatively few in number compared to the Gallo-Roman population they ruled, and over the course of several centuries they gradually abandoned their Germanic Frankish language in favor of the Vulgar Latin spoken by the majority. By the 9th century, the linguistic shift was essentially complete in the western Frankish territories, though Frankish survived longer in the east (eventually evolving into Franconian dialects
This is why 'French' names a Romance language: the Frankish conquerors imposed their political identity but not their language. The language of France is descended from the Vulgar Latin of Roman Gaul, heavily influenced by Gaulish Celtic substrate and Frankish Germanic superstrate. Frankish contributed several hundred words to French, particularly in the domains of warfare, feudalism, agriculture, and daily life — words like 'guerre' (war, from Frankish *werra), 'blanc' (white, from *blank), 'jardin' (garden, from *gard), and 'maréchal' (marshal, from *marhskalk, 'horse servant').
In Old English, 'Frencisc' was used from the 9th century. After the Norman Conquest of 1066, the word took on immense significance in English life, as the Norman French-speaking ruling class dominated England for centuries. The English word evolved through Middle English 'Frensh' and 'Frenche' to the modern 'French.' For roughly three hundred years (1066 to the mid-14th century), French was the language of the English court, law, and aristocracy, and English absorbed thousands of French loanwords during this period.
The name 'France' itself comes from Medieval Latin 'Francia,' meaning 'the land of the Franks.' Originally, 'Francia' referred to the entire Frankish kingdom (including modern Germany, the Low Countries, and northern Italy). As the Carolingian Empire fragmented, 'Francia' gradually narrowed to refer specifically to the western kingdom, roughly corresponding to modern France. The eastern kingdom became 'East Francia' and eventually 'Germany.' The region around Paris retained
The French themselves adopted the Frankish-derived name: 'français' comes from Old French 'franceis,' from Medieval Latin 'franciscus' ('Frankish'). The French language was originally just one of several dialects spoken in France — specifically, the dialect of the Île-de-France region around Paris, sometimes called 'Francien.' Other major dialect groups included Occitan (langue d'oc) in the south, Norman in the northwest, and Picard in the north. The prestige of the Parisian court and the centralization of the French state
Today, French is spoken by approximately 320 million people across five continents, making it one of the most geographically widespread languages in the world. Its name remains a monument to the Franks — a Germanic warrior people who conquered a Latin-speaking land, gave it their name, and then vanished into the culture they had intended to dominate.