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Vastese

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Romance language of Abruzzo, Italy
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Vastese
Lu Vastarol
Lu Uâʃtaréule
RegionItaly
Language familyIndo-European
Language codes
ISO 639-2nap
ISO 639-3nap (Neapolitan)
A book of Vastese popular phrases

Vastese (Vastese: Lu Uâʃtaréule or Lu indialett di lu Uašt, meaning "the dialect of Vasto") is an Abruzzese dialect of Neapolitan language spoken in the town of Vasto. It is not spoken in towns nearby, meaning it’s a vernacular speech.

History

The endonym — the name its speakers use for the language — is Lu Uâʃtaréule. This term is known to have originated in the sixth century AD.

Demography

Today Vastese is spoken monolingually only by residents of Vasto in their 80s and 90s, bilingually by many residents in their 70s, and many middle-aged residents are passive speakers, while most younger residents have no comprehension.

The Vasto Club in Australia is a club organized for migrants to Australia from Vasto.

Phonology

Vastese has more vowel distinctions than Italian. It has vowels that are not in Italian, such as the open front unrounded vowel /æ/. Vastese uses an open back rounded vowel /ɒ/ for the start of the word uâʃtə. It also uses the mid central vowel /ə/. Vastese also uses several diphthongs not used in Italian such as /aʊ/, /eʊ/, and /aɪ/.

The influence of /i/, /u/, /Ī/, or /Ū/ upon /æ/, turns it into either /e/ or /je/.

References

  1. ^ Iuliano, Susanna (2010). Vite italiane : Italian lives in Western Australia. Crawley, W.A.: UWA Pub. p. 133. ISBN 9781921401503.
  2. ^ "Vastesi Language - Vastesi in the World". Vastesi in the World. Retrieved 20 November 2016.
  3. Torres-Tamarit, Francesc; van Oostendorp, Marc; Linke, Kathrin (2016). Approaches to Metaphony in the Languages of Italy. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 151. ISBN 9783110366310.

See also

Romance languages (classification)
Major branches
Eastern
Italo-
Dalmatian
Central
Southern
Others
Western
Gallo-Italic
Gallo-
Romance
Langues
d'oïl
Ibero-
Romance

(West
Iberian
)
Asturleonese
Galician–Portuguese
Castilian
Pyrenean–Mozarabic
Others
  • Barranquenho (mixed Portuguese–Spanish)
  • Caló (mixed Romani–Ibero- and Occitano-Romance)
Occitano-
Romance
Rhaeto-
Romance
Others
Others
Reconstructed
Languages of Italy
Historical linguistic minorities: Albanian, Catalan, Croatian, French, Franco-Provençal, Friulian, Germanic, Greek, Ladin, Occitan, Romani, Sardinian, Slovene, Wenzhounese
Italo-Romance
Italian
Tuscan
Central
Intermediate Southern (Neapolitan)
Extreme Southern
Other Italo-Dalmatian
languages
Sardinian
Sardinian
Occitano-Romance
Catalan
Occitan
Gallo-Romance
French
Franco-Provençal
Gallo-Italic
Ligurian
Lombard
Emilian–Romagnol
Other Gallo-Italic
languages
Venetian
Venetian
Rhaeto-Romance
Rhaeto-Romance
Albanian
Arbëresh language
South Slavic
Slovenian
Serbo-Croatian
Greek
Italiot Greek
German
Bavarian
Other German dialects
Others
  1. Venetian is either grouped with the rest of the Italo-Dalmatian or the Gallo-Italic languages, depending on the linguist.


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