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The Italo-Western languages are the largest branch of Romance languages. They are made up of two branches, the Italo-Dalmatian languages and the Western Romance languages.
branch of the Romance languages. This page was last edited on 22 March 2024, at 04:06. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.
Gallo-Italic languages are often said to resemble Western Romance languages like French, Spanish, or Portuguese, and in large part it is due to their phonology. The Gallo-Italic languages differ somewhat in their phonology from one language to another, but the following are the most important characteristics, as contrasted with Italian : [21]
This is the sentence I was reading: "Standard Italian [...] is somewhat intermediate between the Italo-Dalmatian languages of the South and the Gallo-Romance Northern Italian languages." The link "Italo-Dalmatian languages" send me here. In this articol I learn that Italo-Western languages are all Romamces languages except Romanian and Sardinian.
30 de abr. de 2023 · 1 Italo-Dalmatian languages. Toggle Italo-Dalmatian languages subsection. 1.1 Dalmatian Romance. 1.2 Venetian. 1.3 ...
Evolved from the Vulgar Latin of Iberia, the most widely spoken Iberian Romance languages are Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, and Galician. [4] These languages also have their own regional and local varieties. Based on mutual intelligibility, Dalby counts seven "outer" languages, or language groups: Galician-Portuguese, Spanish, Asturleonese ...
Gallo-Italic of Sicily (Italian: Gallo-italico di Sicilia) is a group of Gallo-Italic languages [clarification needed] found in about 15 isolated communities of central eastern Sicily. Forming a language island in the otherwise Sicilian language area, [2] [3] it dates back to migrations from northern Italy during the reign of Norman Roger I of Sicily [4] and his successors.