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  1. Jul 26, 2020 · enwiki-Venetian_language-20200726.pdf : Wikipedia : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive. by. Wikipedia. Publication date. 2020-07-26. Usage. Attribution-Share Alike 3.0. Topics. wikipedia, offline, pdf, page, mediawiki, 2020-07-26, en, English, enwiki, Venetian language. Collection. wikipediapdfs; wikicollections. Language.

  2. Distribution of Romance languages in Europe. Venetian is number 15. Venetian, [7] [8] wider Venetian or Venetan [9] [10] ( łengua vèneta [ˈeŋɡwa ˈvɛneta] or vèneto [ˈvɛneto]) is a Romance language spoken natively in the northeast of Italy, [11] mostly in Veneto, where most of the five million inhabitants can understand it.

    • 3.9 million (2002)
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  4. Venetian Wikipedia’s user interaction over time | Paolo Massa - Academia.edu. Download Free PDF. Regional Languages on Wikipedia. Venetian Wikipedia’s user interaction over time. Paolo Massa. 2012.

    • Paolo Massa
  5. The Venetian language (in Venetian: vèneto) is a Romance language. It was the language once spoken in the Republic of Venice. Today. In the present day, it is spoken in the Italian regions of Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulia, in Slovenia and in Croatia.

    • 3.9 million (2002)
  6. Venetic language, a language spoken in northeastern Italy before the Christian era. Known to modern scholars from some 200 short inscriptions dating from the 5th through the 1st century bc, it is written either in Latin characters or in a native alphabet derived from Etruscan, the Etruscans having.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  7. Venetic ( / vəˈnɛtɪk /) is an extinct Indo-European language, usually classified into the Italic subgroup, that was spoken by the Veneti people in ancient times in northeast Italy ( Veneto and Friuli) and part of modern Slovenia, between the Po Delta and the southern fringe of the Alps, associated with the Este culture. [3] [1] [4]

  8. Venetian grammar. A peculiarity of Venetian grammar is a "semi-analytical" verbal flexion, with a compulsory " clitic subject pronoun" before the verb in many sentences, "echoing" the subject as an ending or a weak pronoun. As will be clear from the examples below, Venetian subject clitics are neither "redundant" nor "pleonastic" because they ...

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