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  1. Neapolitan (in Neapolitan Napulitan, in Italian Napoletano) is a Romance language, belonging to the Italo-Romance group, and, in its different variants, constituent of the diatopic system known as southern Italian dialects , spoken in Campania and in several neighboring regions of central and southern Italy (Southern Marche, Abruzzo, Molise, ...

  2. Jun 13, 2017 · Marche Bellissimo. Premium Membership. Tongue Tied No More: Deciphering Neapolitan Dialect. Anonymous. | Tue, 06/13/2017 - 02:29. by: Kristin Melia. Neapolitanis it a language or a dialect? Who speaks it and where? Also, when should one speak Italian and when should one speak in dialect?

    • An Introduction to Neapolitan
    • Historical and Ethnolinguistic Background
    • The Schwa: The Germanic Vowel in A Romance Dialect
    • Rhotacism and Consonant Doubling
    • Verbal Differences
    • Italian vs Neapolitan – Conclusion

    Widely spoken in southern Italy, mainly throughout Campania, Molise, Basilicata, Abruzzo and North Apulia and Calabria, the Neapolitan language is still in use among many small communities but is not recognised as an official language. According to UNESCO, together with Sicilian, it is labelled as a Language in Danger of Extinction. Likewise, Neapo...

    Neapolitan, as well as Sicilian and the Italian language, is part of one main language family: the Romance language family. But unlike the others, this southern dialect belongs to the Italo-Dalmatian group, which is a multitude of Romance languages spoken in Southern Italy, Corsica, and in Croatia in the past. Known in linguistics as an Intermediat...

    The main difference between Neapolitan and Italian is the presence of the Schwa, which in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is written as an upside-down e: ə. Wheres in Italian, it is not present, Neapolitan uses it as much as the English language does. And, particularly, its usage is related to the end of words. For instance, nuje(in Engli...

    Another peculiarity of the Neapolitan language is the usage of r instead of d when the latter is at the beginning of the word or in between two vowels. For instance, “to see” in Neapolitan is vedé which is pronounced as veré. This phenomenon is known as rhotacism, typical of northern countries and Germanic languages. At the same time, /nd/ as well ...

    The Neapolitan language hasjust one auxiliary verb for the active form, that is “to have”: avé. In Italian, by comparison, “to be” (essere) is also used for intransitive and reflexive verbs. For example, “I went to Rome yesterday”, would be the following in Neapolitan: In Italian, you would say “sono andato” which uses the verb “to be“. Neapolitan,...

    Although Italian and Neapolitan have the same linguistic roots, the unique pronunciation of certain sounds, unfamiliar vowels such as the schwa, and conjugation differences make this dialect difficult to understand, even for people from different areas of southern Italy. Still, it is a unique linguistic entity that deserves to be cherished and stud...

  3. Aug 26, 2016 · The Neapolitan language is spoken in the city of Naples, of course, but also in a range of forms across the south of Italy.

  4. The Neapolitan language has a total of 7.5 million speakers worldwide. The complete lists of romance languages derived from Vulgar Latin that still exist today is very comprehensive, best-known are Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian, collectively spoken by more than 90 percent out of 1.2 billion Romance language speakers.

  5. Apr 29, 2024 · Neapolitan ( autonym: ('o n)napulitano [ (o n)napuliˈtɑːnə] ; Italian : napoletano) is a Romance language of the Italo-Romance group spoken in Naples and most of continental Southern Italy. It is named after the Kingdom of Naples, which once covered most of the area, since the city of Naples was its capital.

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  7. Jan 10, 2021 · Beyond the unique features of the Neapolitan language, watching Gomorrah was also really eye-opening in terms of the sociolinguistics of Italian “dialects,” which I knew very little about ...

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