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Italian and French for me too.
French. I don't know why but I think Italian sounds annoying (sorry guys!). Spanish is ok but I prefer French. I haven't heard anyone speaking Romanian so I don't really know what it sounds like.
As far as I know, Latin is not a Romance language. The languages that flow from (vulgar) Latin are Romance. But if Latin is acceptable, I'd choose Latin. Sounds so cool in liturgies at least . But French would still be a close second in this case.
yes, maybe standard italian, but try the true italian, wich is regional, and our dialects.. Many don't seem songs.. Try tuscan regional way of speaking that is often harsh; the southern italians dialect of campanian-apulian derivation that can sound guttural, some northern italian dialect are are more more musical, but then again no, bergamasc sound not musical,Italian speech sounds like a song
yes, maybe standard italian, but try the true italian, wich is regional, and our dialects.. Many don't seem songs.. Try tuscan regional way of speaking that is often harsh; the southern italians dialect of campanian-apulian derivation that can sound guttural, some northern italian dialect are are more more musical, but then again no, bergamasc sound not musical,
standard italian in quotidian Life is only spoken from central latium to the po plain with the exception of triveneto and many areas in piedmont; in all this other areas they speak its own languages-dialects true languages
Boss I seem to remember you saying French sounded "gay"
Yeah, so? gays are very cool
I thought we were talking about languages here, not people.
In an earlier post you said you did not like French, "because it sounds gay". I was merely wondering, in an attempt at conversation, why you now liked it.
No matter....I`m no longer interested
What I would most like to know about the posted map: Romance languages in Europe, is why the: languages d'oil HAVEN'T been split up into Parisian French, Walloon, Picard, Belgium French, Champenoise and Lorrain and so forth, like how the Langues d'oc have been split into sundry hued Occitan, Gascon, Arpitan and Catalan-Valecencian?
Seems like the crafty craftsmen behind this sneaky map want to make folks believe the only Romance language in Belgium is standard French! Either this or they are some tinpot outfit who are downright utterly unfit to have anything to do with linguistics.
To the French speakers, this is in piedomontese dialect, do you like it, find many simlarities with your language?
I do not think the Piedmontese resembles to the French ..
Perhaps Occitan
For me, Occitan is looks like Spanish ...
youtube.com/watch?v=IqJk8hJwu-Y (*)
The French words are etymologically Latin, but I think, phonetically, does not look like the other Romance languages..
(*) Je ne peux pas mettre de lien car je n'ai pas encore poster 10 messages: c'est trop nul!
Maybe the Walloon is a little different from other dialects of the langue d'oil, but otherwise it's very similar.
The langue d'oil is essentially an old French, still spoken in the French countryside, but which will disappear soon!
Rising regionalism in France in the twentieth century gave the idea that the different dialects were regional languages: Norman, Gallo, Lorrain ect ..
But this is nonsense ...
What I would most like to know about the posted map: Romance languages in Europe, is why the: languages d'oil HAVEN'T been split up into Parisian French, Walloon, Picard, Belgium French, Champenoise and Lorrain and so forth, like how the Langues d'oc have been split into sundry hued Occitan, Gascon, Arpitan and Catalan-Valecencian?
But one could say that Gascon, Occitan, Catalan and Arpitan tungs are nearer to eachother within the Ocian club than Walloon is to standard French within the Oilian club. Anyway, I think somewhere deep down inside, you acknowledge that mapmakers have mismatched up the Walloon tung with standard Oilly French. PS has a French speaker can you understand Normandy Norman?
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