Gallo-Italic | |
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Gallo-Italian Gallo-Cisalpine Cisalpine | |
Geographic distribution | Italy, San Marino, Switzerland, Monaco, France |
Linguistic classification | Indo-European
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Subdivisions |
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Language codes | |
Glottolog | gall1279 |
Geographic distribution of undisputed Gallo-Italic varieties |
The Gallo-Italic, Gallo-Italian, Gallo-Cisalpine or simply Cisalpine languages constitute the majority of the Romance languages of northern Italy: Piedmontese, Lombard, Emilian, Ligurian, and Romagnol. [3] In central Italy they are spoken in the northern Marches (Gallo-Italic of the Marches); [4] in southern Italy in some language islands in Basilicata (Gallo-Italic of Basilicata) and Sicily (Gallo-Italic of Sicily). [5]
Although most publications define Venetian as part of the Italo-Dalmatian branch, both Ethnologue and Glottolog group it into the Gallo-Italic languages. [6] [7]
The languages are spoken also in the departement of Alpes-Maritimes in France and in Ticino and southern Grisons, both in Switzerland, and the microstates of Monaco and San Marino. They are still spoken to some extent by the Italian diaspora in countries with Italian immigrant communities.
Having a Celtic substratum and a Germanic, mostly Lombardic, superstrate, Gallo-Italian descends from the Latin spoken in northern part of Italia (former Cisalpine Gaul). The group had for part of late antiquity and the early Middle Ages a close linguistic link with Gaul and Raetia, west and north to the Alps. From the late Middle Ages, the group adopted various characteristics of the Italo-Dalmatian languages of the south.
As a result, the Gallo-Italic languages have characteristics of the Gallo-Romance languages to the northwest (including French and Franco-Provençal), the Occitano-Romance languages to the west (including Catalan and Occitan) and the Italo-Dalmatian languages to the north-east, central and south Italy (Venetian, Dalmatian, Tuscan, Central Italian, Neapolitan, Sicilian). For this there is some debate over the proper grouping of the Gallo-Italic languages. They are sometimes grouped with Gallo-Romance, [8] [9] [10] [11] but other linguists group them in Italo-Dalmatian. [12] [13] [14] [15] [16]
Most Gallo-Italic languages have to varying degrees given way in everyday use to regional varieties of Italian.[ citation needed ] The vast majority of current speakers are diglossic with Italian.
Among the regional languages of Italy, they are the most endangered, since in the main cities of their area (Milan, Turin, Genoa, Bologna) they are mainly used by the elderly.
Within this sub-family, the language with the largest geographic spread is Lombard , spoken in the Italian region of Lombardy, in eastern Piedmont and western Trentino. Outside Italy it is widespread in Switzerland in the canton of Ticino, and some southern valleys of the canton of the Grisons.
Piedmontese refers to the languages spoken in the region of Piedmont and the north west corner of Liguria. Historically, the Piedmontese-speaking area is the plain at the foot of the Western Alps, and ends at the entrance to the valleys where Occitan and Franco-Provençal are spoken. In recent centuries, the language has also spread into these valleys, where it is also more widely spoken than these two languages, thus the borders of Piedmontese have reached the western alps watershed that is the border with France.
The speaking area of Ligurian or Genoese cover the territory of the former Republic of Genoa, which included much of nowadays Liguria, and some mountain areas of bordering regions near the Ligurian border, the upper valley of Roya river near Nice, in Carloforte and Calasetta in Southern Sardinia, and Bonifacio in Corsica.
Emilian is spoken in the historical-cultural region of Emilia, which forms part of Emilia-Romagna, but also in many areas of the bordering regions, including southern Lombardy, south-eastern Piedmont, around the town of Tortona, province of Massa and Carrara in Tuscany and Polesine in Veneto, near the Po delta. With Romagnol , spoken in the historical region of Romagna, forms the Emilian-Romagnol linguistic continuum.
Gallo-Piceno (gallo-italic of the Marches or gallico-marchigiano) is spoken in the province of Pesaro and Urbino and in the northern part of the province of Ancona (the Marches). [4] Once classified as a dialect of Romagnol, now there is a debate about considering it a separated Gallo-Italic language. [17] [18]
Varieties of Gallo-Italic languages are also found in Sicily, [5] corresponding with the central-eastern parts of the island that received large numbers of immigrants from Northern Italy, called Lombards, during the decades following the Norman conquest of Sicily (around 1080 to 1120). Given the time that has lapsed and the influence from the Sicilian language itself, these dialects are best generically described as Southern Gallo-Italic. The major centres where these dialects can still be heard today include Piazza Armerina, Aidone, Sperlinga, San Fratello, Nicosia, and Novara di Sicilia. Northern Italian dialects did not survive in some towns in the province of Catania that developed large Lombard communities during this period, namely Randazzo, Paternò and Bronte. However, the Northern Italian influence in the local varieties of Sicilian are marked. In the case of San Fratello, some linguists suggested that the nowadays dialect has Provençal as its basis, having been a fort manned by Provençal mercenaries in the early decades of the Norman conquest (bearing in mind that it took the Normans 30 years to conquer the whole of the island).
Other dialects, attested from 13th and 14th century, are also found in Basilicata, [5] more precisely in the province of Potenza (Tito, Picerno, Pignola and Vaglio Basilicata), Trecchina, Rivello, Nemoli and San Costantino. [19]
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]
Numbers | Lombard | Istrian | Emilian | Piedmontese | Venetian | Ligurian |
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1 | vyŋ / vœna | uŋ / una | oŋ / ona | yŋ / 'yŋa | uŋ / una | yŋ / yna |
2 | dy | dui | du / dʌu | dʊi̯/ 'dʊe̯ | due / dɔ | dui / duɛ |
3 | tri/tre | tri | tri / trai | trɛi̯ / trɛ | tri / trɛ | trei / trɛ |
4 | kwatr | kwatro | kwatr | kwatr | kwatro | kwatrʊ |
5 | ʃiŋk | siŋkwe | θeŋk | siŋk | siŋkwe | siŋkwɛ |
6 | ses | seje | sis | ses | sie | sei |
7 | sɛt | siete | sɛt | sɛt | sɛte | sɛtɛ |
8 | vɔt | wɔto | ɔt | œt | ɔto | øtʊ |
9 | nœf | nuve | nov | nœw | nove | nøvɛ |
10 | des | ʒize | diz | des | dieze | deʒɛ |
Italian (reference) | (Lei) chiude sempre la finestra prima di cenare. |
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Bergamasque (Eastern Lombard) | (Lé) La sèra sèmper sö ol balcù prima de senà. |
Brescian (Eastern Lombard) | (Lé) La sèra semper sö la finèstra enacc de senà. |
Milanese (Western Lombard) | (Lee) la sara semper sü la fenestra inans de zena. |
Ludesan (Western Lombard) | lé la sarà semper sü la finèstra inans da disnà. |
Piacentine (Emilian) | Le la sära sëimpar sö/sü la finestra (fnestra) prima da diśnä |
Bolognese (Emilian) | (Lî) la sèra sänper la fnèstra prémma ed dṡnèr. |
Cesenate (Romagnol) | (Lî) la ciöd sèmpar la fnèstra prèmma d' z'nèr. |
Riminese (Romagnol) | (Léa) la ciùd sémpre la fnèstra prèima ad z'né. |
Pesarese (Gallo-Piceno) | Lìa la chiód sénpre la fnèstra préma d' ć'nè. |
Fanese (Gallo-Piceno) | Lìa chìud sèmper la fnestra prima d' c'né. |
Piedmontese | (Chila) a sara sempe la fnestra dnans ëd fé sin-a. |
Canavese (Piedmontese) | (Chilà) a sera sémper la fnestra doant ëd far sèina. |
Ligurian | Lê a særa sénpre o barcón primma de çenâ. |
Tabarchin (Ligurian dialect of Sardinia) | Lé a sère fissu u barcun primma de çenò. |
Carrarese (transition dialect among Ligurian, Emilian and Tuscan) | Lê al sèr(e)/chiode sènpre la fnestra(paravento) prima de cena. |
Romansh | Ella clauda/serra adina la fanestra avant ch'ella tschainia. |
Friulian | Jê e siere simpri il barcon prin di cenâ. |
Gherdëina Ladin | Ëila stluj for l vier dan cené. |
Nones (Ladin) | (Ela) la sera semper la fenestra inant zenar. () |
Solander (Ladin) | La sèra sempro (sèmper) la fenèstra prima (danànt) da cenàr. |
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Venetian | Ła sàra/sèra senpre el balcón vanti senàr/dixnàr. |
Trentine | Èla la sèra sèmper giò/zo la fenèstra prima de zenà. |
Istriot (Rovignese) | Gila insiera senpro el balcon preîma da senà. |
Florentine (Tuscan) | Lei la 'hiude sempre la finestra prima di cenà. |
Corsican | Ella chjudi sempri a finestra primma di cenà. |
Sardinian | Issa tancat semper sa ventana in antis de si esser chenada. |
Neapolitan | Essa abbarrechée sempe 'a fenesta primma ca cene. |
Salentino | Quiddhra chiude sèmpre a fenéscia prìma cu mancia te sira. |
Sicilian | Idda chiudi sèmpri la finéstra prìma di manciari a la sira. |
Perugian | Lia chiud sempre la fnestra prima d' cenè. |
French | Elle ferme toujours la fenêtre avant de dîner. |
Romanian | (Ea) închide totdeauna fereastra înainte de a cina. |
Spanish | Ella siempre cierra la ventana antes de cenar. |
Latin | (Illa) Claudit semper fenestram antequam cenet. |
The Gallo-Romance branch of the Romance languages includes in the narrowest sense the langues d'oïl and Franco-Provençal. However, other definitions are far broader and variously encompass the Occitan or Occitano-Romance, Gallo-Italic or Rhaeto-Romance languages.
Piedmontese is a language spoken by some 2,000,000 people mostly in Piedmont, a region of Northwest Italy. Although considered by most linguists a separate language, in Italy it is often mistakenly regarded as an Italian dialect. It is linguistically included in the Gallo-Italic languages group of Northern Italy, which would make it part of the wider western group of Romance languages, which also includes French, Occitan, and Catalan. It is spoken in the core of Piedmont, in northwestern Liguria, and in Lombardy.
The Lombard language belongs to the Gallo-Italic group within the Romance languages. It is characterized by a Celtic linguistic substratum and a Lombardic linguistic superstratum and is a cluster of homogeneous dialects that are spoken by millions of speakers in Northern Italy and southern Switzerland. These include most of Lombardy and some areas of the neighbouring regions, notably the far eastern side of Piedmont and the extreme western side of Trentino, and in Switzerland in the cantons of Ticino and Graubünden. The language is also spoken in Santa Catarina in Brazil by Lombard immigrants from the Province of Bergamo, in Italy.
Venetian, wider Venetian or Venetan is a Romance language spoken natively in the northeast of Italy, mostly in Veneto, where most of the five million inhabitants can understand it. It is sometimes spoken and often well understood outside Veneto: in Trentino, Friuli, the Julian March, Istria, and some towns of Slovenia, Dalmatia (Croatia) and Bay of Kotor (Montenegro) by a surviving autochthonous Venetian population, and in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, the United States and the United Kingdom by Venetians in the diaspora.
Milanese is the central variety of the Western dialect of the Lombard language spoken in Milan, the rest of its metropolitan city, and the northernmost part of the province of Pavia. Milanese, due to the importance of Milan, the largest city in Lombardy, is often considered one of the most prestigious Lombard variants and the most prestigious one in the Western Lombard area.
The La Spezia–Rimini Line, for the linguistics of the Romance languages, is a line that demarcates a number of important isoglosses that distinguish Romance languages south and east of the line from Romance languages north and west of it. The line runs through northern Italy, approximately between the cities of La Spezia and Rimini. Romance languages south and east of it include Italian and the Eastern Romance languages, whereas Catalan, French, Occitan, Portuguese, Romansh, Spanish, and the Gallo‒Italic languages are representatives of the Western group. The Sardinian language is not part of either Western or Eastern Romance.
Regional Italian is any regional variety of the Italian language.
Emilian-Romagnol is a linguistic continuum that is part of the Gallo-Italic languages spoken in the northern Italian region of Emilia-Romagna. It is divided into two main varieties, Emilian and Romagnol.
The languages of Italy include Italian, which serves as the country's national language, in its standard and regional forms, as well as numerous local and regional languages, most of which, like Italian, belong to the broader Romance group. The majority of languages often labeled as regional are distributed in a continuum across the regions' administrative boundaries, with speakers from one locale within a single region being typically aware of the features distinguishing their own variety from others spoken nearby.
The Ticinese dialect is the set of dialects, belonging to the Alpine and Western branch of the Lombard language, spoken in the northern part of the Canton of Ticino (Sopraceneri); the dialects of the region can generally vary from valley to valley, often even between single localities, while retaining the mutual intelligibility that is typical of the Lombard linguistic continuum.
Western Lombard is a group of dialects of Lombard, a Romance language spoken in Italy. It is widespread in the Lombard provinces of Milan, Monza, Varese, Como, Lecco, Sondrio, a small part of Cremona, Lodi and Pavia, and the Piedmont provinces of Novara, Verbano-Cusio-Ossola, the eastern part of the Province of Alessandria (Tortona), a small part of Vercelli (Valsesia), and Switzerland. After the name of the region involved, land of the former Duchy of Milan, this language is often referred to as Insubric or Milanese, or, after Clemente Merlo, Cisabduano.
Northern Italy is a geographical and cultural region in the northern part of Italy. The Italian National Institute of Statistics defines the region as encompassing the four northwestern regions of Piedmont, Aosta Valley, Liguria and Lombardy in addition to the four northeastern regions of Trentino-Alto Adige, Veneto, Friuli-Venezia Giulia and Emilia-Romagna.
Ligurian or Genoese is a Gallo-Italic language spoken primarily in the territories of the former Republic of Genoa, now comprising the area of Liguria in Northern Italy, parts of the Mediterranean coastal zone of France, Monaco, the village of Bonifacio in Corsica, and in the villages of Carloforte on San Pietro Island and Calasetta on Sant'Antioco Island off the coast of southwestern Sardinia. It is part of the Gallo-Italic and Western Romance dialect continuum. Although part of Gallo-Italic, it exhibits several features of the Italo-Romance group of central and southern Italy. Zeneize, spoken in Genoa, the capital of Liguria, is the language's prestige dialect on which the standard is based.
Italo-Western is, in some classifications, the largest branch of the Romance languages. It comprises two of the branches of Romance languages: Italo-Dalmatian and Western Romance. It excludes the Sardinian language and Eastern Romance.
Gallo-Italic of Sicily, also known as the Siculo-Lombard dialects, is a group of Gallo-Italic languages found in about 15 isolated communities of central eastern Sicily. Forming a language island in the otherwise Sicilian language area, it dates back to migrations from northern Italy during the reign of Norman Roger I of Sicily and his successors.
Western Romance languages are one of the two subdivisions of a proposed subdivision of the Romance languages based on the La Spezia–Rimini Line. They include the Gallo-Romance, Occitano-Romance and Iberian Romance branches. Gallo-Italic may also be included. The subdivision is based mainly on the use of the "s" for pluralization, the weakening of some consonants and the pronunciation of "Soft C" as /t͡s/ rather than /t͡ʃ/ as in Italian and Romanian.
Emilian is a Gallo-Italic unstandardised language spoken in the historical region of Emilia, which is now in the western part of Emilia-Romagna, Northern Italy.
Romagnol is a Romance language spoken in the historical region of Romagna, consisting mainly of the southeastern part of Emilia-Romagna, Italy. The name is derived from the Lombard name for the region, Romagna. Romagnol is also spoken outside the region, particularly in the independent Republic of San Marino. Romagnol is classified as endangered because older generations have "neglected to pass on the dialect as a native tongue to the next generation".
The Italo-Dalmatian languages, or Central Romance languages, are a group of Romance languages spoken in Italy, Corsica (France), and formerly in Dalmatia (Croatia).
Old Gallo-Italic, also referred as Old Lombard, or Old Northern Italian is a Gallo-Romance language spoken from 900 until 1500. The language is similar to Old Occitan, which was spoken around the same area. Most texts were written in the Lombard koiné.