Alpine languages: Difference between revisions
From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
WeepingElf (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
WeepingElf (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
Unlike the [[Caucasian languages|Caucasus]], the Alps do not have surviving indigenous non-Indo-European languages. In the [[League of Lost Languages]], however, we have taken the liberty to invent such non-Indo-European languages, see [[Palaeo-Alpine languages]]. | Unlike the [[Caucasian languages|Caucasus]], the Alps do not have surviving indigenous non-Indo-European languages. In the [[League of Lost Languages]], however, we have taken the liberty to invent such non-Indo-European languages, see [[Palaeo-Alpine languages]]. | ||
[[Category:Natlangs]] |
Latest revision as of 10:53, 8 February 2013
The languages spoken today in the Alps are:
- German dialects
- Swiss German
- Bavarian
- Romance languages
- Gallo-Romance
- French
- Franco-Provençal
- Occitan
- Rhaeto-Romance
- Rumansch
- Ladin
- Friulian
- Italian
- South Slavic languages
- Slovenian
Known extinct languages of the Alps are:
- Continental Celtic
- Gaulish
- Lepontic
- Noric
- Raetic (probably related to Etruscan)
Unlike the Caucasus, the Alps do not have surviving indigenous non-Indo-European languages. In the League of Lost Languages, however, we have taken the liberty to invent such non-Indo-European languages, see Palaeo-Alpine languages.