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List of Romance languages

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According to the Summer Institute for Linguistics's guide to world languages, the Ethnologue, the Romance languages include 47 languages and dialects spoken in Europe. This language group is a part of the Italic languages family, with Latin being the only extant Italic non-Romanic language.

The classification described below is largely based on the analysis provided by the Ethnologue. The ISO-639-2 code roa is applied by the ISO for any Romance variety that does not have its own code. The Ethnologue classification is regarded[who?] to be at one extreme of points of view held by linguists, who are roughly divided into 'splitters' (like the Ethnologue) and 'lumpers'. The Ethnologue classification produces a very detailed classification, more reflectant of regional difference than many other linguists would accept, but valuable as a description of varieties.

Top level groups are listed roughly East to West.

This article lists also the main groups of Romance-based Creole languages.

The Romance language family (simplified) - click to enlarge (needs correction of Dalmatian)

Contents

[edit] Eastern Romance

[edit] Southern Romance

  • Sardinian macrolanguage: 1300,000 speakers in Sardinia. Four versions recognized; all are sub-included in ISO 639-1 code, sc; ISO 639-2 code, srd)
  • Corsican (SIL Code, COI; ISO 639-1 code, co; ISO 639-2 code, cos) is sometimes listed under Southern Romance languages, and other times under Italian-Dalmatian languages

[edit] Italo-Dalmatian branch of Italo-Western Romance

  • Dalmatian (SIL Code, DLM; ISO 639-2 code, roa): Croatia, extinct in the 19th century
    • Regional varieties: Ragusan, Vegliot, Zara/Zadar
  • Istriot (SIL Code, IST; ISO 639-2 code, roa): 1,000 speakers in Istria
  • Italian (SIL Code, ITN; ISO 639-1 code, it; ISO 639-2 code, ita): 60,000,000 in Italy; 3,000,000 in the Americas and 2,000,000 in Western Europe, Oceania and Africa. Italian dialects:
    • Romanesco: spoken in Rome
    • Salentino: spoken in Salento
    • Judeo-Italian (SIL Code, ITK; ISO 639-2 code, roa): 4,000 Italy
    • Corsican (SIL Code, COI; ISO 639-1 code, co; ISO 639-2 code, cos), related to Italian, and particularly to the Tuscan dialects, is sometimes listed under Italian-Dalmatian languages, and other times under Southern Romance languages
  • Napoletano-Calabrese (SIL Code, NPL; ISO 639-2 code, roa): about 8,000,000 in central-southern Italy
  • Sicilian (SIL Code, SCN; ISO 639-2 code, scn): 6,000,000 in Sicily, Calabria and Puglia

[edit] Western Romance branch of Italo-Western Romance

Western Romance languages comprise the Romance subgroup with the most languages and the most speakers. It includes three major international languages - French, Portuguese and Spanish as well as many regional languages, dialects and varieties.

[edit] Pyrenean-Mozarabic Romance

[edit] Gallo-Iberian Romance

The languages in this subfamily can be grouped into four main groups: Gallo-Rhaetian, Northern Italian, Occitano Romance, and Iberian Romance. But there is no consensus on how these four groups relate. The Ethnologue groups the first two under Gallo-Romance (and generally lists Northern Italian first and Gallo-Rhaetian second), and considers Occitano Romance a subgroup of Iberian Romance. Sometimes, however, Occitano Romance is regarded as a group of its own. Yet another method is to lump Northern Italian and Occitano Romance as subgroups of a group of their own.[citation needed]

For simplicity of presentation, the four groups are listed separately below. However, note that all points of view among linguists reject a classifcation into four groups.[citation needed]

[edit] Gallo-Rhaetian Gallo-Romance

[edit] Northern Italian Gallo-Romance

These languages are also sometimes called Padanian or Cisalpine.

[edit] Occitano-Romance

There is a controversy about the classification of Catalan and Occitan languages. One way is to list them as a distinct group of its own. A second way is to lump them into the Ibero-Romance group, under the claim that they serve as transitional languages between Ibero-Romance and Gallo-Romance. A third way is to lump it with the Northern Italaian subclad of the Gallo-Romance.[citation needed]

[edit] Iberian Romance

This group includes the West Iberian languages - Asturian, Leonese, Mirandese, Spanish, Galician, Portuguese and their dialects. According to some opinions,[who?] it also includes Catalan (as East Iberian ) and Occitan.

Caló (SIL Code, RMR; ISO 639-2 code, roa), or Spanish Romani is a Romani language whose grammar has been heavily influenced by Spanish. The Ethnologue lists it in a separate group of mixed languages; it is not one of the 47.

[edit] Extinct branches of the Romance language tree

  • African Romance: Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya (extinct).
  • British Romance: England and Wales (extinct).
  • The language of the Morlachs: Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro and Slovenia (extinct).
  • It's believed there were Germano-Romance languages in present-day Southern Germany, Switzerland and Austria in the 11th century AD.
  • Slavic-Romance: The hypothetical language of the Brodnici of southern Moldavia and western Ukraine in the 13th to 15th century AD.[citation needed]
  • Pannonian Romance: Hungary (extinct).

[edit] Pidgins and creoles

The global spread of colonial Romance languages has given rise to numerous creole languages and pidgins. Some of the lesser-used languages have also had influences on varieties spoken far from their traditional regions. The following is a partial list of creole languages and pidgins, grouped by their main source language.

While not being pidgins nor creoles, English (see Middle English creole hypothesis), Basque and Albanian have a substantial Romance influence in their vocabularies.

For mixed languages based on Romance languages, see the main article on Mixed languages.

[edit] Romance languages by usage

The 47 spoken varieties identified by the Ethnologue can be grouped by usage as follows:

The Ethnologue classification does not include numerous other dialects and varieties of the Romance languages, such as:

  • extinct Romance branches (African Romance, the language of the Morlachs)
  • pidgins and creoles
  • Medieval Latin as it is regarded only as a written language (it was the lingua franca of the scientists during the Middle Ages), not spoken by an ethnic population
  • numerous other Spanish dialects and varieties, such as Cantabrian or Latin American
  • numerous Portuguese varieties and dialects, such as Brazilian Portuguese, African Portuguese, Judeo-Portuguese
  • Naçad and other varieties of Occitan
  • 8 other oïl languages (besides French, Wallon, and Picard)
  • numerous American and African dialects of French
  • central Italian varieties, including Romanesco, Salentino, Toscan dialect

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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