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The sociology of the Romance languages
2013Today the Romance languages are spoken over much of Europe, central and southern Latin America and Quebec, as well as in the former French, Portuguese and Spanish colonies of many parts of Africa and, Asia. Latin found itself alongside numerous languages of many diverse linguistic affiliations, necessarily giving rise to extensive bilingualism.
Martin Maiden +2 more
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Type-noun binominals in four Romance languages
Language Sciences, 2016Wiltrud Mihatsch
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Synchronic and diachronic analysis of prepositional multiword modifiers across Romance languages
Les variations diatopiques dans les expressions figées, 2020Lexicological and lexicographical studies on multiword expressions in Romance languages have significantly increased in recent years. Even though some attention has been paid to Multiwords functioning as adjectives and adverbs, the structural and the ...
Valentina Piunno, Vittorio Ganfi
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Interrogatives in the Romance Languages
2022This article investigates the structural properties of interrogative clauses in the Romance languages. Interrogative clauses are typically produced by the speaker in order to elicit information from the addressee; depending on the kind of information requested by the speaker, one can distinguish between two basic types of interrogatives: polar ...
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Perfects in the Romance Languages
2021This article is devoted to the description of perfect tenses in Romance. Perfects can be described as verbal forms which place events in the past with respect to some point of reference, and indicate that the event has some special relevance at the point of reference ; in that, they are opposed to past tenses, which localize an event in the past with ...
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Palatal Sound Change in the Romance Languages
, 2019This monograph presents a thorough investigation of the main historical and present-day variation and change patterns undergone by palatal sounds in the Romance languages.
André Zampaulo
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2010
Ti Alkire and Carol Rosen trace the changes that led from colloquial Latin to five major Romance languages, those which ultimately became national or transnational languages: Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian. Trends in spoken Latin altered or dismantled older categories in phonology and morphology, while the regional varieties of ...
Ti Alkire, Carol Rosen
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Ti Alkire and Carol Rosen trace the changes that led from colloquial Latin to five major Romance languages, those which ultimately became national or transnational languages: Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian. Trends in spoken Latin altered or dismantled older categories in phonology and morphology, while the regional varieties of ...
Ti Alkire, Carol Rosen
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2003
Nine Romance languages are discussed, first in context of their common Latin origins, and then as individual studies. The final chapter is devoted to Romance-based Creole languages. This book should be of interest to students and lecturers in linguistics, language study and Romance linguistics.
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Nine Romance languages are discussed, first in context of their common Latin origins, and then as individual studies. The final chapter is devoted to Romance-based Creole languages. This book should be of interest to students and lecturers in linguistics, language study and Romance linguistics.
openaire +2 more sources

