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Aragonese language

 

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Aragonese language



 
 
Aragonese ( in English, in Spanish), is a Romance language
Romance languages

The Romance languages are a branch of the Indo-European languages comprising all the languages that descend from Latin language, the language of ancient Rome....
 now spoken in a number of local varieties by between 10,000 and 30,000 people over the valleys of the Aragón River
Aragón River

The River Arag?n or R?o Arag?n is one of the left-hand tributaries of the river Ebro. It starts at Ast?n , passes through Jaca and Sang?esa , and joins the Ebro at Milagro , near Tudela....
, Sobrarbe
Sobrarbe

Sobrarbe is one of the Comarcas of Spain in the northern part of the province of Huesca , part of the autonomous community of Aragon in Spain. Many of its people speak the Aragonese language locally known as fabla....
 and Ribagorza
Ribagorza

Ribagorza is a county, or comarca, in [Aragon]] situated at the north-east of the province of Huesca , Spain. It borders the Haute-Garonne departement in France to the north; and the Catalonia to the east....
 in Aragon
Aragon

Aragon is an autonomous communities of Spain of Spain. Located in northeastern Spain, the region comprises three provinces of Spain from north to south: Huesca , Zaragoza , and Teruel ....
. It is also colloquially known as (literally, "speech") and is the only remaining example of the medieval Navarro-Aragonese dialects.

onese originated around the eighth century as one of many Latin dialects
Vulgar Latin

Vulgar Latin is a blanket term covering the popular dialects and sociolects of the Latin which diverged from each other in the early Middle Ages, evolving into the Romance languages by the 9th century....
 developed in the Pyrenees
Pyrenees

The Pyrenees are a mountain range in southwest Europe that form a natural border between France and Spain. They separate the Iberian Peninsula from the rest of continental Europe, and extend for about from the Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean Sea ....
 on top of a strong Basque
Basque language

Basque is the language spoken by the Basque people who inhabit the Pyrenees in North-Central Spain and the adjoining region of South-Western France....
-like substratum.






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Aragonese ( in English, in Spanish), is a Romance language
Romance languages

The Romance languages are a branch of the Indo-European languages comprising all the languages that descend from Latin language, the language of ancient Rome....
 now spoken in a number of local varieties by between 10,000 and 30,000 people over the valleys of the Aragón River
Aragón River

The River Arag?n or R?o Arag?n is one of the left-hand tributaries of the river Ebro. It starts at Ast?n , passes through Jaca and Sang?esa , and joins the Ebro at Milagro , near Tudela....
, Sobrarbe
Sobrarbe

Sobrarbe is one of the Comarcas of Spain in the northern part of the province of Huesca , part of the autonomous community of Aragon in Spain. Many of its people speak the Aragonese language locally known as fabla....
 and Ribagorza
Ribagorza

Ribagorza is a county, or comarca, in [Aragon]] situated at the north-east of the province of Huesca , Spain. It borders the Haute-Garonne departement in France to the north; and the Catalonia to the east....
 in Aragon
Aragon

Aragon is an autonomous communities of Spain of Spain. Located in northeastern Spain, the region comprises three provinces of Spain from north to south: Huesca , Zaragoza , and Teruel ....
. It is also colloquially known as (literally, "speech") and is the only remaining example of the medieval Navarro-Aragonese dialects.

History

Aragonese originated around the eighth century as one of many Latin dialects
Vulgar Latin

Vulgar Latin is a blanket term covering the popular dialects and sociolects of the Latin which diverged from each other in the early Middle Ages, evolving into the Romance languages by the 9th century....
 developed in the Pyrenees
Pyrenees

The Pyrenees are a mountain range in southwest Europe that form a natural border between France and Spain. They separate the Iberian Peninsula from the rest of continental Europe, and extend for about from the Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean Sea ....
 on top of a strong Basque
Basque language

Basque is the language spoken by the Basque people who inhabit the Pyrenees in North-Central Spain and the adjoining region of South-Western France....
-like substratum. The original Kingdom of Aragon
Kingdom of Aragon

The Kingdom of Aragon was an old Monarchy in the Iberian Peninsula, corresponding to the modern-day Autonomous communities of Spain of Aragon , in Spain....
 (formed by the counties of Aragon, Sobrarbe and Ribagorza) was progressively expanded from the mountain ranges towards the South, pushing the Moors
Moors

In the Spanish language, the term for Moors is Moro; in Portuguese language the word is mouro. There seems to have been some confusion about the relationship of the word moro/mouro to the word moreno , both from Greek language ma?ros, i.e....
 further south in the Reconquista
Reconquista

The Reconquista was a period of 800 years in the Middle Ages during which several Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula succeeded in retaking the Iberian Peninsula from the Muslims....
 and spreading the Aragonese language.

The dynastic union of the Catalan Counties
Catalonia

Catalonia , is an Autonomous Community in northeast Spain.Catalonia covers an area of 32,114 km? and has an official population of 7,210,508. It borders France and Andorra to the north, Aragon to the west, the Valencian Community to the south, and the Mediterranean Sea to the east ....
 and the Kingdom of Aragon—which formed the Aragonese Crown in the twelfth century—did not result in a merging of the language forms of the two territories into a single form; Catalan
Catalan language

Catalan is a Romance languages, the national language and official language of Andorra, and a official language in the Autonomous Communities of Spain of the Balearic Islands, Catalonia and Valencian Community and in the city of Alghero in the Italy List of islands in the Mediterranean of Sardinia....
 continued to be spoken in the east, and Navarro-Aragonese in the west. The Aragonese reconquista to the south ended in the kingdom of Murcia
Murcia

Murcia is the capital city of the Region of Murcia, located at the river Segura in south-eastern Spain. Its population is 433,850 , and the population of its metropolitan area is 743,326 ranking as the ninth-largest metropolitan area of Spain....
, which was ceded by James I of Aragon
James I of Aragon

File:Jaume I Palma.jpgJames I the Conqueror was the Kings of Aragon, Count of Barcelona, and Lord of Montpellier from 1213 to 1276. His long reign saw the expansion of the Crown of Aragon to the south and into and across the Mediterranean as far as Naples: into Kingdom of Valencia to the south and the Balearic Islands, Sicily and the Kingd...
 to the Kingdom of Castile
Kingdom of Castile

Kingdom of Castile was one of the medieval kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula. It emerged as a political autonomous entity in the 9th century. It was called County of Castile and was held in vassalage from the Kingdom of Le?n....
 as a dowry for an Aragonese princess.

The spread of Castilian
Castilian Spanish

Castilian Spanish is a term related to the Spanish language, but whose exact meaning can vary even in that language. In English Castilian Spanish usually refers to the variety of Spanish spoken in north and central Spain or as the language standard for radio and TV speakers....
, now more commonly known as Spanish
Spanish language

Spanish or Castilian is a Romance languages that originated in northern Spain, and gradually spread in the Kingdom of Castile and evolved into the principal language of government and trade....
, and the Castilian origin of the Trastamara
Trastámara

The House of Trast?mara was a dynasty of kings in the Iberian Peninsula, which governed in Crown of Castile from 1369 to 1504, in Arag?n and List_of_monarchs_of_Sicily#Aragonese_direct_rule.2C_1409.E2.80.931516 from 1412 to 1516, in Kingdom_of_Navarre from 1425 to 1479, and in Naples from 1442 to 1501....
 dynasty and a strong similarity between Castilian and Aragonese, meant that further recession was to follow. One of the key moments in the history of Aragonese was when a king of Castilian origin was appointed in the fifteenth century: Ferdinand I of Aragon
Ferdinand I of Aragon

File:Ferran d'Antequera al retaule Sancho de Rojas .jpgFerdinand I called of Antequera and also the Just or the Honest, was king of kingdom of Aragon, kingdom of Valencia, kingdom of Majorca, kingdom of Sardinia and Corsica and king of kingdom of Sicily, duke of duchy of Athens and Neopatria, and County of Barcelona, cou...
, also known as Ferdinand of Antequera.

The mutual union of the crowns of Aragon
Crown of Aragon

The Crown of Aragon was a permanent union of multiple titles and states in the hands of the King of Aragon.At the height of its power by the 14th and 15th centuries, the Crown of Aragon was a thalassocracy controlling a large portion of the present-day eastern Spain, Northern Catalonia, as well as some of the major islands and mainland...
 and Castile
Crown of Castile

The Crown of Castile, as a historic entity, is usually considered to have begun in 1230 with the third and definitive union of the two kingdoms of Kingdom of Le?n and Kingdom of Castile, or more concretely, with the union of their parliaments a few decades later....
 and the progressive suspension of all capacity of self-rule from the sixteenth century meant that Aragonese, while still widely spoken, was limited to a rural and colloquial use, as the nobility chose Spanish as their symbol of power. The suppression of Aragonese reached its most dramatic point during the rule of Francisco Franco
Francisco Franco

Francisco Paulino Hermenegildo Te?dulo Franco y Bahamonde, Salgado y Pardo de Andrade , commonly known as Francisco Franco or Francisco Franco y Bahamonde was the dictator and Head of State of Spain from October 1936, and de facto regent of the nominally restored Kingdom of Spain from 1947 until his death in 1975....
 in the twentieth century. Pupils were punished in schools for using it, and language politics in Francoist Spain forbade the teaching of any language that was not Spanish.

The constitutional democracy voted by the people in 1978 meant an increase in the literary works and studies conducted in and about the Aragonese language.

Modern Aragonese

Today, Aragonese is still spoken natively within its core area, the Aragonese mountain ranges of the Pyrenees, in the comarcas of Somontano, Jacetania, Sobrarbe, and Ribagorza.

These are the major cities and towns where Aragonese speakers can still be found: Huesca
Huesca

Huesca is a city in Aragon, Spain. Huesca is the capital of the Spanish Huesca . In 2006 it had a population of 49,312....
, Graus
Graus

Graus is a village in the Provinces of Spain of Huesca , located in the Pyrenees. The Battle of Graus took place here, and Spain philosopher Baltasar Graci?n y Morales was exiled here....
, Monzón
Monzón

Monz?n is a small town in the autonomous community of Aragon, Spain. It has a population of 17,050. It is located in the northeast and adjoins the rivers Cinca and Sosa....
, Barbastro
Barbastro

Barbastro is a Spanish city in the Somontano de Barbastro county of Huesca in Aragon. The city is at the junction of the rivers Cinca and Vero....
, Fonz, Echo, Estadilla, Benasque
Benasque

Benasque is a town in the county of Ribagorza, province of Huesca , . It is the main town in the Benasque Valley, located in the heart of the Pyrenees and surrounded by the highest peaks in that range....
, Campo
Campo, Spain

Campo is a town in the county of Ribagorza, in the province of Huesca , in Aragon, Spain. Situated in a valley between 2 rivers, the Esera and Rialbo, it is surrounded by snow-capped Pyrenean mountain peaks: most notably, the Turb?n and Cotiella ....
, Sabiñánigo
Sabiñánigo

Sabi??nigo is a municipality located in the Huesca , Aragon, Spain. According to the 2004 census , the municipality has a population of 8,855 inhabitants....
, Jaca
Jaca

Jaca is a city of northeastern Spain near the border with France, in the midst of the Pyrenees in the province of Huesca . Jaca, a ford on the Arag?n River at the crossing of two great early medieval routes, one from Pau, Pyr?n?es-Atlantiques to Zaragoza, was the fortified city out of which the County of Aragon and Kingdom of Aragon develop...
, Plan, Ansó, Ayerbe
Ayerbe

Ayerbe is a town in the Hoya de Huesca comarca, in the Autonomous communities of Spain of Aragon in Spain....
, Broto, and El Grado.

Aragonese is also learnt as a second language by other inhabitants of the country in areas like Huesca
Huesca

Huesca is a city in Aragon, Spain. Huesca is the capital of the Spanish Huesca . In 2006 it had a population of 49,312....
, Zaragoza
Zaragoza

Zaragoza, also called Saragossa in English language, is the capital city of the Zaragoza and of the Autonomous communities of Spain and former Kingdom of Aragon of Aragon, Spain....
, Ejea de los Caballeros
Ejea de los Caballeros

Ejea de los Caballeros is a town and municipality in the province of Zaragoza , part of the autonomous community of Aragon, Spain. It is one of the five main towns in the comarca de las Cinco Villas or "shire of the five villages"....
, and Teruel
Teruel

Teruel is a city in Aragon, Spain, the capital of Teruel . It has a population of 34,240 in 2006. It is noted for its harsh climate, its jam?n serrano , its pottery and its famous Fiestas ....
. According to recent polls, altogether they only make up around 10,000 active speakers and about 30,000 passive speakers.

There are about 25-30 dialectal variants of Aragonese, the majority of which are in the province of Huesca
Huesca (province)

Huesca is a provinces of Spain of northeastern Spain, in northern Aragon. The capital is Huesca.Positioned just south of the central Pyrenees, Huesca borders France and the French Departments of Frances of Pyr?n?es-Atlantiques and Hautes-Pyr?n?es....
, due to its mountainous terrain where natural isoglosses
Isogloss

An isogloss is the geographical boundary or delineation of a certain linguistics feature, e.g. the pronunciation of a vowel, the meaning of a word, or use of some syntactic feature....
 have developed around valley enclaves, and where, not surprisingly, the highest incidence of spoken Aragonese is found. Ribagorçan
Ribagorçan

Ribagor?an is a Romance languages dialect spoken in the Aragon counties of Ribagor?a and La Litera, in Huesca , and Alta Ribagor?a in Lleida, Catalonia....
, is one such variant: an eastern Aragonese dialect, which is transitional to Gascon, Occitan, Catalan, and Spanish.

Phonology

Some historical traits of Aragonese language:
  • As in Spanish, open O, E from Romance result systematically into diphthongs , , e.g. VET'LA > ("old woman", Sp. , Cat. )
  • Loss of final unstressed -E, e.g. GRANDE > ("big")
  • Unlike Spanish, Romance initial F- is preserved, e.g. FILIU > ("son", Sp. , Cat. , Pt. )
  • Romance yod (GE-, GI-, I-) results in voiceless palatal affricate ch , e.g. IUVEN > ("young man", Sp. , Cat. ), GELARE > ("to freeze", Sp. , Cat. )
  • Like in Occitan
    Occitan language

    Occitan , known also as Lenga d'?c or Langue d'oc is a Romance languages spoken in Occitania, that is, Southern France, the Occitan Valleys of Italy, Monaco and in the Aran Valley of Spain....
     and Galician
    Galician language

    Galician is a language of the Iberian Romance languages branch, spoken in Galicia , an Autonomous communities of Spain located in northwestern Spain, as well as in small bordering zones in the neighbouring autonomous communities of Asturias and Castile and Le?n and in Northern Portugal....
    /Portuguese
    Portuguese language

    Portuguese is a Romance language that originated in what is now Galicia and Portugal. It is derived from the Latin language spoken by the Romanization Pre-Roman peoples of the Iberian Peninsula around 2000 years ago....
    , Romance groups -ULT-, -CT- result in , e.g. FACTU > ("done", Sp. , Cat. , Gal./Port. ), MULTU > ("many"/"much", Sp. , Cat. , Gal. , Port. ).
  • Romance groups -X-, -PS-, SCj- result into voiceless palatal fricative ix , e.g. COXU > ("crippled", Sp. , Cat. )
  • Unlike Spanish, Romance groups -Lj-, -C'L-, -T'L- result into palatal lateral ll , e.g. MULIERE > ("woman", Sp. , Cat. )), ACUT'LA > ("needle", Sp. , Cat. )
  • Unlike Spanish, Latin -B- is maintained in past imperfect endings of verbs of the second and third conjugations: ("he had", Sp. , Cat. ), ("he was sleeping", Sp. , Cat. )
  • Aragonese is, along with dialects of Gascon, the only Western Romance language to have preserved the voicelessness of many intervocalic stop consonants, e.g. CLETA > ("sheep hurdle", Cat. , Fr. ), CUCULLIATA > cocullata ("crested lark", Sp. , Cat. )


Orthography

Contemporary Aragonese has two orthographic
Orthography

The orthography of a language specifies the correct way of using a specific writing system to write the language. Orthography is derived from Greek language ????? orth?s and ???fe?? gr?phein ....
 standards:
  • The grafía de Uesca codified in 1987 by the Consello d'a Fabla Aragonesa (CFA) at a convention in Huesca
    Huesca

    Huesca is a city in Aragon, Spain. Huesca is the capital of the Spanish Huesca . In 2006 it had a population of 49,312....
     (Aragonese: Uesca) is used by a majority of Aragonese writers. It uses a more uniform system when assigning letters to phonemes with less regard to the etymology of a word. For example, words traditionally written with "v" and "b" are uniformly written with "b" in the Uesca system. Likewise "ch", "j", "g(+e)", and "g(+i)" are all written "ch". In addition, the orthography uses letters more strongly associated with Spanish (e.g., "ñ
    N

    N is the fourteenth letter in the Latin alphabet. Its name in English language is spelled en ....
    ").
  • The grafía SLA devised in 2004 by the Sociedat de Lingüistica Aragonesa
    Sociedat de Lingüistica Aragonesa

    The Sociedat de Ling?istica Aragonesa - the Society of Aragonese Linguistics is a society dedicated to the promotion of the Aragonese language....
     (SLA) is used by a minority of Aragonese writers. It uses more etymological-based forms that are closer to Catalan, Occitan, and medieval Aragonese sources. With the SLA system, "v" and "b" and "ch", "j", "g(+e)", and "g(+i)" are distinct forms and "ny" is used instead of "ñ".


In 2006, an Academia de l'Aragonés was established but, , it had not decided on a single orthographic standard.

Grammar

Aragonese grammar is similar to the grammar of other Iberian Romance languages, such as Spanish
Spanish language

Spanish or Castilian is a Romance languages that originated in northern Spain, and gradually spread in the Kingdom of Castile and evolved into the principal language of government and trade....
 and Catalan
Catalan language

Catalan is a Romance languages, the national language and official language of Andorra, and a official language in the Autonomous Communities of Spain of the Balearic Islands, Catalonia and Valencian Community and in the city of Alghero in the Italy List of islands in the Mediterranean of Sardinia....
.

Pronouns

Aragonese, like many other Romance languages, but unlike other Ibero-Romance languages, preserves the difference between the Latin forms 'inde' and 'ibi' as 'en/ne' and 'bi/i/ie'.

See also

  • Aragonese Wikipedia
    Aragonese Wikipedia

    The Aragonese Wikipedia , founded on 21 July 2004, is the Aragonese language version of Wikipedia. As of 31 August 2008 it had 10,098 articles and 1,540 registered users, 4 of whom were administrators....


External links

  • , a theoretic language regulator for Aragonese.
  • , Cultural society & school Nogará.