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  1. Italo-Dalmatian can be split into: [1] Italo-Romance, which includes most central and southern Italian languages. Dalmatian Romance, which includes Dalmatian and Istriot. The generally accepted four branches of the Romance languages are Western Romance, Italo-Dalmatian, Sardinian and Eastern Romance. But there are other ways that the languages ...

  2. We have fragmentary evidence for fourteenth-century Ragusan, but this variety is heavily influenced by Venetian, the dominant Romance language of the eastern Adriatic and, as an official language, also by Croatian.

  3. 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.

  4. Dalmatian or Dalmatic (Italian: dalmatico, Croatian: dalmatski) was a group of Romance varieties that developed along the coast of Dalmatia. Over the centuries they were increasingly influenced, and then supplanted, by Croatian and Venetian.

  5. The Italo-Dalmatian languages is one of the two branches with which the authors of Ethnologue classify the Western Romance languages. The group is made up of the Italo-Romance languages along with Dalmatian and Istrian.

  6. Dalmatian is grouped with Romanian by some authors, and with Italian ("Italo-Dalmatian") by others. Sardinian is grouped with Italian by some, and it's left on its own ("Southern Romance") by others.

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  8. Dalmatian language, extinct Romance language formerly spoken along the Dalmatian coast from the island of Veglia (modern Krk) to Ragusa (modern Dubrovnik). Ragusan Dalmatian probably disappeared in the 17th century; the Vegliot Dalmatian dialect became extinct in the 19th.

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