Palaeo-Alpine languages: Difference between revisions
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Extinct languages of the Alps include the Celtic languages Gaulish and Lepontic and the non-Indo-European language Rhaetian, which is probably related to Etruscan. | Extinct languages of the Alps include the Celtic languages Gaulish and Lepontic and the non-Indo-European language Rhaetian, which is probably related to Etruscan. | ||
In the [[League of Lost Languages]], the Alps, similar to the Caucasus, are home to several non-Indo-European languages in addition to the languages listed above. (The idea behind this is that the Alps, being similar in size and landscape to the Caucasus, could harbour a similar wealth of languages.) These languages are grouped together als '''Alpine languages''' or '''Palaeo-Alpine languages'''. Like the Caucasian languages, they do not form a single family. | In the [[League of Lost Languages]], the Alps, similar to the Caucasus, are home to several ('''fictional''') non-Indo-European languages in addition to the languages listed above. (The idea behind this is that the Alps, being similar in size and landscape to the Caucasus, could harbour a similar wealth of languages.) These languages are grouped together als '''Alpine languages''' or '''Palaeo-Alpine languages'''. Like the Caucasian languages, they do not form a single family. | ||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
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[[Category:LLL]] | [[Category:LLL]] | ||
[[Category:Fictional languages]] |
Revision as of 11:30, 13 April 2010
The Alps mountain range is occupied by languages of three Indo-European groups:
- West Germanic
- Alemannic
- Bavarian
- Romance
- French
- Occitan
- Italian
- Rhaeto-Romance
- Grisons
- Dolomites Ladin
- Friulian
- South Slavic
- Slovenian
Extinct languages of the Alps include the Celtic languages Gaulish and Lepontic and the non-Indo-European language Rhaetian, which is probably related to Etruscan.
In the League of Lost Languages, the Alps, similar to the Caucasus, are home to several (fictional) non-Indo-European languages in addition to the languages listed above. (The idea behind this is that the Alps, being similar in size and landscape to the Caucasus, could harbour a similar wealth of languages.) These languages are grouped together als Alpine languages or Palaeo-Alpine languages. Like the Caucasian languages, they do not form a single family.