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  1. A number of lexical items are shared with Ibero-Romance due to the similar date of Latinization for both regions, although it can also be explained by means of Bartoli's areal linguistics theory, Ibero-Romance being a peripheral area, as are Balkano-Romance, Southern-Italian and Rhaeto-Romance, whereas Gallo-Romance and Italo-Romance are the ...

  2. Occitano-Romance Occitano- and Ibero-Romance Gallo-Romance Italo-Dalmatian Ibero-Romance Eastern Romance English Piedmontese Ligurian Emilian Venetian Occitan Catalan Aragonese Arpitan French Sicilian Italian Spanish Portuguese Romanian; chair cadrega/ careja carêga scrâna carèga cadièra: cadira silla cheyére: chaise sìeggia: sedia: silla ...

  3. Street sign in Zenízio, with the street name in Mirandese and in Portuguese. Mirandese (mirandés or lhéngua mirandesa) is an Asturleonese [4] language or variety that is sparsely spoken in a small area of northeastern Portugal in eastern Tierra de Miranda (made up of the municipalities of Miranda de l Douro, Mogadouro and Bumioso, being extinct in Mogadouro and present in Bumioso only in ...

  4. Fala ("speech", also called Xalimego [2]) is a Western Romance language commonly classified in the Galician-Portuguese subgroup, with some traits from Leonese, spoken in Spain by about 10,500 people, of whom 5,500 live in a valley of the northwestern part of Extremadura near the border with Portugal.

  5. The Portuguese language developed in the Western Iberian Peninsula from Latin spoken by Roman soldiers and colonists starting in the 3rd century BC. Old Galician, also known as Medieval Portuguese, began to diverge from other Romance languages after the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the Germanic invasions, also known as barbarian invasions, in the 5th century, and started appearing in ...

  6. The following features are characteristic of Spanish phonology and also of some other Ibero-Romance languages, but not the Romance languages as a whole: palatalization of Latin -NN- and -LL- into /ɲ/ and /ʎ/ ( a ñ o , caba ll o ) (also in Catalan: a ny , cava ll ).

  7. The Gallo-Romance are a branch of Romance languages. It includes French and several other languages spoken in modern France and northern Italy and Spain. According to some linguists, it also includes Occitan and Catalan. Others group both together as a separate Occitano-Romance branch or place Catalan within the Ibero-Romance group.

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