PORTUGUESE AND OTHER ROMANCE LANGUAGES
The Romance languages are a group of closely related vernaculars descended from the LATIN LANGUAGE, a member of the Italic branch of INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGES. The designation Romance is derived from the Latin phrase romanica loqui, "to speak in Roman fashion," which attests to the popular, rather than literary, origins of the languages.
National Languages
The Romance languages that have acquired national standing as the official tongues are:
- French, with approximately 98 million speakers living principally in France, Belgium, Switzerland, Canada, and parts of Africa;
- Italian, with 65 million speakers in Italy, Switzerland, and parts of Africa
- Portuguese, with 137 million speakers in Portugal, Brazil, and parts of Africa and Asia;
- Spanish, with 231 million speakers in Spain, Latin America, and parts of the Caribbean;
- Romanian, with 25 million speakers in Romania and other parts of the Balkans.
In strict geographical terms, these languages are even more widespread, for there are large pockets of Spanish speakers in the United States, Italian speakers in Argentina, Romanian speakers in Yugoslavia, and so on.
Nonnational Languages
Several distinct Romance languages function as nonnational, regional vernaculars.
- Among these are Rheto-Romance, or Rhaetian, which consists of a group of related languages spoken in Switzerland, where they are called Romansch, and in northern Italy, where they are called Ladin or Friulian.
- In southern France, Provencal, or Occitan, is spoken by about 12 million people. Formerly more unified as a literary language, Provencal now consists of a series of local dialects.<
- Catalan, with about 5 million speakers, is used alongside Spanish as the language of Catalonia on the Spanish Mediterranean coast from the French border to Valencia. It is also spoken in Alghero, Sardinia, in the Balearic Islands, and in the Pyrenean valley of Aran, the French region of Rousillon, and the semiprincipality of Andorra. During the Middle Ages, Catalan was closely related to the southern French dialects.
- Sardinian is the collective name for a group of Romance languages spoken on the island of Sardinia by nearly 1 million people. It is of particular interest to Romance scholars because of the archaic features of its dialects, such as the retention of the Latin sound k that other Romance languages have palatalized (compare Sardinian kelu with French ciel, Italian and Spanish cielo, and Romanian cer).
- Ladino, also called Judaeo-Romance or Sephardic, is spoken by Sephardic Jews in Istanbul, Salonika, and elsewhere around the Mediterranean. It is based on 15th-century Spanish, reflecting the time when the Jews were expelled from Spain by royal edict. The language also contains Turkish, Greek, and Hebrew elements.
- mance creoles, whose origins are found in PIDGINS or simplified trade languages, have also sprung up around the world. Haitian and Louisiana French are such languages, as are the varieties of Portuguese found in Macao and Goa.
Vulgar Lain
From the evidence of Latin grammarians, popular playwrights, and inscriptions, it is apparent that in Republican Rome the spoken language of the lower classes was undergoing modifications in pronunciation and grammar that ultimately were to differentiate it from the written language and the language of the privileged. During the period of empire and Roman expansion, it was this Latin of the people, so-called Vulgar Latin, that was carried to the far-flung provinces by soldiers, merchants, and colonists.
Not all provinces were Romanized at the same time, however. Sicily and Sardinia were colonized as early as 238 BC, while Dacia--modern Romania--did not come under Roman occupation until about AD 100. In the provinces, Vulgar Latin underwent further modification by the subjugated peoples, who brought to it their own speech habits and pronunciation influenced by their own indigenous languages. The Iberians, for example, pronounced Latin one way, whereas the Gauls pronounced it another.
The collapse of the empire's frontiers during the 5th century under the thrust of Germanic tribes left Rome cut off from the provinces, and the outer regions drifted apart as each modified its form of spoken Latin in unique ways. In every region of the former Latin-speaking world, the emerging Romance languages then in turn began to break up among themselves.
French
In Gallo-Roman France, a split occurred between north and south, assisted by incursions of Germanic-speaking Franks--whence the name "France"--into the north. Here, too, further dialectalization occurred throughout the Middle Ages, resulting in a multitude of speech forms such as Francien, Picard, Norman, Lorrain, and Walloon. Southern French, or Provencal, split into Languedocien, Auvergnat, and many other dialects. The dialect of Paris gradually became the national language, however, because of the political prestige of the capital and today is accepted as the model for the French language.
Italian
Dialectal varieties of the emerging Italian language revolved around Gallo-Italian in the northwest; a northeastern or Venetian group; a central dialectal group that included the speech of Tuscany, Umbria, northern Latium (the province of Rome), and Corsica; and clusters of dialects to the south, including Abruzzese-Neapolitan and Calabrian-Sicilian. The ultimate predominance of Tuscan as the standard was a result more of the cultural than of any political prestige of Florence. Although the speech of Tuscany has long been considered the most prestigious form of Italian, however, that of Rome is fast becoming the standard language.
Spanish
On the Iberian peninsula, two languages developed, each with its own dialects. Galician-Portuguese broke into northwestern, central, and southern dialects; Spanish came to embrace Leonese and Castilian in the center of the peninsula, Aragonese further to the east, and Andalusian in the south. The dialect of Lisbon vies with that of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil as the standard form of Portuguese taught in North American schools and as the model for the language.
Castilian Spanish, spoken in central Spain, including the capital Madrid, is generally thought of as the most prestigious form of Spanish, although Mexican Spanish is often taught in North American classrooms.
Portuguese
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Romanian
Romanian has broken into several dialects, such as Macedo-Romanian, spoken in southern Macedonia, and Isto-Romanian, the language of a few thousand people in northwestern Croatia. The dialect of Bucharest serves as the standard language.
LINGUISTIC FEATURES
Similarities and differences among the Romance languages and their relation to Latin may be seen in the following
sentences, which mean "The poet loves the girl":
Latin: Poeta puellam amat
French: Le poete aime la jeune fille
Italian: Il poeta ama la ragazza
Portuguese: O poeta ama a menina
Spanish: El poeta ama a la muchacha
Romanian: Poetul iubeste fata
The word poet was borrowed from Greek by Latin, underscoring the fact that not all Romance words, even when derived from Latin, were originally Italic. Some vocabulary may differ from one Romance language to another because words were taken from different Latin forms with similar meanings, or were borrowed from the local native languages. Sometimes words were incorporated into one or the other of the Romance languages from neighboring tongues; Spanish izquierdo, "left," for example, comes from Basque, and Romanian sticla, "drinking glass," comes from Slavic. It was also often the case that new words entered Romance languages from the vocabulary of conquering peoples: Spanish aceite and Portuguese azeite, "oil," come from Arabic, and French danser, "to dance," and gagner, "to harvest," were borrowed from Germanic.
Historical Importance of Romance Languages
Latin continued to be the only medium of written expression during the early Middle Ages, and the first extant text of substantial length in Romance--the so-called Oaths of Strasbourg, a treaty of alliance sworn by two of Charlemagne's descendants--dates as late as 842.
No other group of languages, however, provides such extensive documentation of both the mother tongue, Latin, and the descendant Romance languages. This invaluable legacy has allowed greater insight into the causes and effects of language change, and offers a unique opportunity for historical linguists to test many of their hypotheses.
