Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

EASTERN ROMANCE LANGUAGES

Map of Balkans with regions inhabited by Romanians/Vlachs highlighted

The 'Eastern Romance languages', sometimes known as the 'Vlach languages', are a group of Romance languages that developed in Southeastern Europe from the local eastern variant of Vulgar Latin.

Contents
History
Common features
Languages
See also

History


Several hundred years after the Roman Empire's dominance of the region, the local form of Vulgar Latin developed into Proto-Romanian, a language which had most of the features of modern Romanian. Due to foreign invasions (see Romania in the Dark Ages) and the migration of Vlach shepherds (see Vlachs in Wallachia), around 800CE and 1200CE Proto-Romanian split into four separate languages: Daco-Romanian (today's Romanian), Aromanian, Megleno-Romanian and Istro-Romanian. While under Soviet rule, Eastern Moldavia came to be known as an independent nation, Moldova, with its own language, Moldovan.

Common features


Main articles: Proto-Romanian

This group was one of the earliest to be isolated. As such, they contain a few words which were replaced with Germanic borrowings in Western Romance languages, for example, the word for ''white'' is derived from Latin "albus" instead of Germanic "blank".
They also share a few sound changes with the western Romance languages: some with Italian, such as [kl] > [kj] (Lat. 'cl'arus > Rom. 'chi'ar, Ital. 'chi'aro) and also a few with Dalmatian, such as [gn] > [mn] (Lat. co'gn'atus > Rom. cu'mn'at, Dalm. co'mn'ut). However, most of them are original, see: Latin to Romanian sound changes.
The languages that are part of this group have some features that differentiate them from the other Romance languages, notable being the grammatical features shared within the Balkan linguistic union as well as some semantic peculiarities, such as ''lume'' ("world") being derived from Latin ''lumen'' ("light"), ''inimă'' ("heart") being derived from Latin ''anima'' ("soul"), etc.
They also contain a Paleo-Balkanic substrate of a few hundreds of words, shared with Albanian (considered to be of Dacian origin) and 70 early Slavic borrowings, but the Hungarian language words are found only in Romanian and Istro-Romanian.

Languages



Romanian (known officially as Moldovan in the Republic of Moldova)

Aromanian

Megleno-Romanian

Istro-Romanian

See also



Romanian substratum words

List of Romance languages

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.