Geography, asked by pramaniks, 6 months ago

can anyone give a proper description of romance languages?

this is a geography question. and for the last time I am telling u. romance does not have anything to do with love.

answer it only if u know.pls no uselessness. I need it NOW.​

help me out here

Answers

Answered by infopuneet1508
2

Answer:

The Romance languages are the modern languages that evolved from Vulgar ... Romance. Geographic distribution, Originated in Southern, Western and Eastern Europe; now also ...

Geographic distribution: Originated in Southern, Western and Eastern Europe

Explanation:

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Answered by bimlasaxena2013
1

Answer:

hey mate here is your answer hope it helps pls mark me as brainliest it is a very big one but after reading this you will understand every single part of your question.

Explanation:

Romance languages, group of related languages all derived from Vulgar Latin within historical times and forming a subgroup of the Italic branch of the Indo-European language family. The major languages of the family include French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Romanian, all national languages. Catalan also has taken on a political and cultural significance; among the Romance languages that now have less political or literary significance or both are the Occitan and Rhaetian dialects, Sardinian, and Dalmatian (extinct), among others. Of all the so-called families of languages, the Romance group is perhaps the simplest to identify and the easiest to account for historically. Not only do Romance languages share a good proportion of basic vocabulary—still recognizably the same in spite of some phonological changes—and a number of similar grammatical forms, but they can be traced back, with but few breaks in continuity, to the language of the Roman Empire. So close is the similarity of each of the Romance languages to Latin as currently known from a rich literature and continuous religious and scholarly tradition that no one doubts the relationship. For the nonspecialist, the testimony of history is even more convincing than the linguistic evidence: Roman occupation of Italy, the Iberian Peninsula, Gaul, and the Balkans accounts for the “Roman” character of the major Romance languages. Later European colonial and commercial contacts with parts of the Americas, of Africa, and of Asia readily explain the French, Spanish, and Portuguese spoken in those regions.

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