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  1. This created a contrast with the languages near the periphery (which include Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian) which are deemed as "conservative". [5] Sardinian is generally acknowledged as the most conservative Romance languages, at least from a phonetic point of view.

  2. Sardinian language. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. English: Sardinian ( Sardu) is the main historical language spoken in the island of Sardinia, Italy, remarkable for being the most conservative of the Romance languages and for its Paleosardinian substratum.

  3. Max Leopold Wagner (17 September 1880 – 9 July 1962) was a German philologist and ethnologist, particularly known for his studies on the Sardinian language. He also carried out pioneering research on the Spanish language in Hispanic America. In a posthumous review of his three-volume Dizionario etimologico sardo, Ernst Pulgram wrote: It can ...

  4. Most Sardinian forests were cut down at this time, in order to provide the Piedmontese with raw materials, like wood, used to make railway sleepers on the mainland. The extension of primary natural forests, praised by every traveller visiting Sardinia, would in fact be reduced to little more than 100,000 hectares at the end of the ...

  5. 29 de jul. de 2023 · Sardinian is a language which belongs to the Romance branch of the Indo-European languages. It is spoken and written on most of the island of Sardinia. Classified by virtually all linguists as being part of the Western subdivision, it is considered the most conservative of the Romance languages in terms of phonology and is noted for its ...

  6. The ancient Sardinian and Corsican tribes are the ancestors of most present-day native Sardinians [5] and Corsicans, and their language or languages, like Paleo-Sardinian and Paleo-Corsican, are the substrate of the modern Sardinian and Corsican languages, now part of the Neo-Latin branch .

  7. The language (or languages) spoken in Sardinia during the Bronze Age is unknown, since there are no written records of such period. According to Eduardo Blasco Ferrer, the Proto-Sardinian language was akin to Proto-Basque and the ancient Iberian, while others believe it was related to Etruscan.