Romance: difference between revisions

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{{trans-top|group of languages and cultures which are derived from Vulgar Latin}}
{{trans-top|group of languages and cultures which are derived from Vulgar Latin}}
* German: {{t+|de|Romanisch|n}}
* German: {{t+|de|Romanisch|n}}
* Greek: {{t+|el|ρομανικές γλώσσες|f-p}}
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* Galician: {{t+|gl|románico|m}}
* Galician: {{t+|gl|románico|m}}
* German: {{t+|de|romanisch}}
* German: {{t+|de|romanisch}}
* Greek: {{t+|el|ρωμανικός}}
* Greek: {{t+|el|ρομανικός}}
* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|újlatin}}
* Hungarian: {{t+|hu|újlatin}}
* Icelandic: {{t|is|rómanskur}}
* Icelandic: {{t|is|rómanskur}}

Latest revision as of 07:30, 18 May 2024

See also: romance, romancé, and românce

English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Etymology[edit]

From Old French romanz (vernacular language (of France)), from Late Latin rōmānicē, from Latin rōmānicus < rōmānus + -icus. Extended in the 17th century to all languages derived from Latin.

Noun[edit]

Romance (uncountable)

  1. The group of languages and cultures which are derived from Vulgar Latin. [from 17th c.]

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Adjective[edit]

Romance

  1. Of or dealing with languages or cultures derived from Roman influence and Latin: French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Galician, Romanian, Catalan, Occitan, etc.
    • Eulàlia Bonet and Joan Mascaró, On the representation of contrasting rhotics, in: 1997, Fernando Martínez-Gil, Alfonso Morales-Front (eds.), Issues in the Phonology and Morphology of the Major Iberian Languages, p. 103ff., here p. 103:
      In this paper we will concentrate on the problem posed by Iberian Romance languages (i.e. Catalan, Portuguese, and Spanish), [...]

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