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  1. Aug 2, 2017 · Extract. Asturian (ISO 639), also known as Bable, Asturiano, Asturianu, Astur-Leonese or Leonese, is the vernacular language of Principality of Asturias, an autonomous community of just over one million inhabitants located in Northern Spain. Asturian is spoken by approximately 100,000 individuals within Asturias plus a few thousand more outside ...

  2. Mirandese has a distinct phonology, morphology and syntax. It has its roots in the local Vulgar Latin spoken in the northern Iberian Peninsula . Mirandese is a descendant of the Astur-Leonese variety spoken in the Kingdom of León and has both archaisms and innovations that differentiate it from the modern varieties of Astur-Leonese spoken in ...

  3. Physical map of Asia. 4583x4878px / 9.16 Mb Go to Map. Asia time zone map. 1891x1514px / 1.03 Mb Go to Map. Asia political map. 3000x1808px / 914 Kb Go to Map. Blank ...

  4. A Civilization Explained. The Leonese were the inhabitants of the Kingdom of León. They were among the first to take up arms against the muslim conquest of the Iberian peninsula. The kingdom rose to great heights and became one of the primary powers in the area. Their success caught up with the Leonese when a certain “breakaway region ...

  5. The variety crosses the Asturian and Leonese administrative borders and is spoken by towns on either side. It's called Paḷḷuezu by its speakers. Here's an example of Alistanu, which is another Western kind of Astur-Leonese or Leonese, spoken in León. Just across the border from Mirandese (which it sounds very similar to).

  6. Asturian ( / æˈstʊəriən /; asturianu [astuˈɾjanʊ] ), [4] [5] is a West Iberian Romance language spoken in the Principality of Asturias, Spain. [6] Asturian is part of a wider linguistic group, the Asturleonese languages. The number of speakers is estimated at 100,000 (native) and 450,000 (second language). [7]

  7. The sound change to , called yeísmo, may appear in Old East and Central Leonese. This phenomenon may have spread to Castilian from Asturian and Leonese settlers. Literature. The first text in the Leonese vernacular was the Nodicia de kesos, dated from the 10th century.

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