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  1. Pannonian Latin (alternatively Pannonian Romance) was a variant of Vulgar Latin that developed in Pannonia, but became extinct after the loss of the province. History [ edit ] Pannonia province in the Roman Empire in 125 Surviving fragment of a Roman military diploma found at Carnuntum (now in Austria ) in the province of Pannonia

  2. Pannonian Romance was an Indo-European language, pertaining to the Centum group in the neo-latin languages, with some Celtic roots and related to the old Illyrian. According to the linguist Roxana Curc, the main source of intelligence on this extinct language is the many toponyms in the area of Lake Balaton and some anthroponyms, hydronims and ...

  3. Pannonia, province of the Roman Empire, corresponding to present-day western Hungary and parts of eastern Austria, as well as portions of several Balkan states, primarily Slovenia, Croatia, and Serbia (Vojvodina). The Pannonians were mainly Illyrians, but there were some Celts in the western part.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Early Pannonian texts used <ụ> for modern <v>; most modern editions use <v> instead (compare use of Old English wynn) Proto-Pannonian (400-600 AD) Proto-Pannonian mostly shares its phonological changes with other Romance dialects, but its morphology already sets it apart from the other Romance languages. Phonological changes:

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  6. Pannonian Romance was spoken by Romanized Celtic and Illyrian peoples that developed in Pannonia, between modern-day Vienna and Belgrade, after the fall of the Western Roman Empire. Despite the Romanized population being mentioned in several annals, no works of literature and few traces in modern languages survive.

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