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  1. As for origins, Sardinian comes from unknown roots possibly directly leading to sanscrite, then influenced by phenician, etruscan and widely filtered by latin. It is indeed a romance language. Sardinian does not come from unknown roots. It does not lead directly to the Sanskrit language.

  2. Sardinian surnames. Sassarese language. Categories: Southern Romance languages. Languages of Sardinia. Languages written in Latin script. Hidden categories: Commons category link is on Wikidata. Wikipedia categories named after languages.

  3. sc.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pàgina_printzipaleWikipedia

    Ordinamentu giurìdicu. Santi Romano in su 1930. Giurista, magistradu, polìticu italianu. Un' ordinamentu giurìdicu in deretu est su cuncordu de sas normas giurìdicas chi regulant sa bida de una comunidade; cunforma a su brocardu " ubi societas ibi ius ", est a nàrrere ue bi (at) sotziedade bi (at) deretu, sos ordinamentos giurìdicos sunt ...

  4. The Southern Corsican macro variety ( Suttanacciu, Suttanu, Pumontincu or Oltramontano) is the most archaic and conservative group, spoken in the districts of Sartène and Porto-Vecchio. Unlike the Northern varieties and similarly to Sardinian, the group retains the distinction of the Latin short vowels ĭ and ŭ (e.g. pilu, bucca ).

  5. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lingua_sardaLingua sarda - Wikipedia

    Rebecca Posner, John N. Green (1982). Language and Philology in Romance . Mouton Publishers. L'Aja, Parigi, New York. p. 171) Classificazione delle lingue neolatine (Koryakov Y.B., 2001). La lingua sarda è ascritta nel gruppo distinto del Romanzo Insulare (Island Romance), assieme al còrso antico (quello moderno fa parte a pieno titolo della compagine italoromanza, così come gli idiomi ...

  6. Number of native speakers of each Romance language, as fractions of the total 690 million (2007) The Romance language most widely spoken natively today is Spanish, followed by Portuguese, French, Italian and Romanian, which together cover a vast territory in Europe and beyond, and work as official and national languages in dozens of countries.

  7. Sardinian is not a dialect it is a language. The most widely spoken language in Sardinia may be Italian, but the Sardinian language known as Sardo is still widely spoken among locals. It’s a rich and beautiful language. Today, there are over 1,350,000 native or second-language speakers of Sardinian. Out of all the romance languages (including ...