Romanic$71033$ - traduction vers grec
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Romanic$71033$ - traduction vers grec

EXTINCT ROMANCE LANGUAGE
Dalmatian Language; Ragusean Dalmatian; Vegliot; User:Dewrad/Vegliot; Velioto; ISO 639:dlm; Vegliote; Vegliot Dalmatian language; Dalmato-Romanic language; Dalmatic language; Vegliot dialect; Ragusan dialect; Ragusan language; Vegliot language; Dalmatian (language); Dalmatian dialects; Dalmato-Romance language; Dalmato-Romance (language); Dalmato-Romanic (language); Dalmato-Romanic dialects; Dalmato-Romanic (dialects); Dalmato-Romance dialects; Dalmato-Romance (dialects)
  • Areas of Dalmatian dialects.
  • [[Tuone Udaina]], the last speaker of Dalmatian

Romanic      
adj. νεολατινικός

Définition

Rhaeto-Romance
[?ri:t?(?)r??'mans]
(also Rhaeto-Romanic -'man?k)
¦ adjective relating to or denoting the Romance dialects spoken in parts of SE Switzerland, NE Italy, and Tyrol.
¦ noun the Rhaeto-Romance dialects.
Origin
from L. Rhaetus 'of Rhaetia' (a Roman province in the Alps) + Romance.

Wikipédia

Dalmatian language

Dalmatian () or Dalmatic (; Dalmatian: langa dalmata or simply dalmato; Italian: lingua dalmatica, dalmatico; Croatian: dalmatski) was a Romance language that was spoken in the Dalmatia region of present-day Croatia, and as far south as Kotor in Montenegro. The name refers to a tribe of the Illyrian linguistic group, Dalmatae. The Ragusan dialect of Dalmatian, the most studied prestige dialect, was the official language of the Republic of Ragusa for much of its medieval history until it was gradually supplanted by other local languages.

Dalmatian speakers lived in the coastal towns of Zadar (Jadera), Trogir (Tragur, Traù), Spalato (Split; Spalato), Ragusa (Dubrovnik; Raugia, Ragusa), and Kotor (Cattaro), each of these cities having a local dialect, and on the islands of Krk (Vikla, Veglia), Cres (Crepsa), and Rab (Arba).