French Language
As a means of communications, a language never stays static and immutable. Cicero’s Latin pronouncements are grammatically and literally different from the Church Latin of 1150 A.D. Shakespeare’s English prose is quite odd-sounding to an American or Canadian in today’s world of commerce. Likewise, the French poetry of of François Villon is transparently different from the everyday French heard on the streets Nantes, Dijon, Marseilles or Paris, today. Everything is always in flux.