Revision as of 00:01, 22 July 2005 editChronographos (talk | contribs)1,458 edits replaced POV terms "forced", "unwilling" with NPOV "have not been". Replaced POV "their language", "that language" with NPOV "it".← Previous edit | Revision as of 12:18, 22 July 2005 edit undoAlbanau~enwiki (talk | contribs)1,211 edits restore - Talk:Arvanitic_language#acknowledge_neutral_source - bring evidence that Arvanitic is as a separate language cause I have brought you evidence that is variety of Tosk AlbanianNext edit → | ||
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'''Arvanitic''' (or Arvanitika, Arvanitic: ''{{Unicode|Αρbε̰ρίσ̈τε}}'' / ''Arbëríshte'', ]: ''Αρβανίτικα'' / ''Arvanítika'' |
'''Arvanitic''' (or Arvanitika, Arvanitic: ''{{Unicode|Αρbε̰ρίσ̈τε}}'' / ''Arbëríshte'', ]: ''Αρβανίτικα'' / ''Arvanítika'') is an ] language sharing a common origin with the ] ] dialect. It is not mutually intelligible with ] ]. Arvanitic has been spoken by the ] people of ] for more than five centuries. | ||
The approximately 150,000 speakers inhabit more than 300 villages in ]. There are no monolingual Arvanitic-speakers; all are bilingual in ], and the language has been influenced by Greek over the centuries. Arvanitic is considered an ] as |
The approximately 150,000 speakers inhabit more than 300 villages in ]. There are no monolingual Arvanitic-speakers; all are bilingual in ], and the language has been influenced by Greek over the centuries. Arvanitic is considered an ] as most of Arvanites have been unwilling or forbidden to learn their language. Consequently it is only used by some septuagenarians and octogenarians, when trying to communicate with Albanian immigrants who have not learned Greek yet. Although it is traditionally a ] rather than a ], an ] adapted from the ] has been developed for Arvanitic. | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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Revision as of 12:18, 22 July 2005
error: ISO 639 code is required (help) Arvanitic (or Arvanitika, Arvanitic: Αρbε̰ρίσ̈τε / Arbëríshte, Greek: Αρβανίτικα / Arvanítika) is an Indo-European language sharing a common origin with the Albanian Tosk dialect. It is not mutually intelligible with Gheg Albanian. Arvanitic has been spoken by the Arvanite people of Greece for more than five centuries.
The approximately 150,000 speakers inhabit more than 300 villages in Greece. There are no monolingual Arvanitic-speakers; all are bilingual in Greek, and the language has been influenced by Greek over the centuries. Arvanitic is considered an endangered language as most of Arvanites have been unwilling or forbidden to learn their language. Consequently it is only used by some septuagenarians and octogenarians, when trying to communicate with Albanian immigrants who have not learned Greek yet. Although it is traditionally a spoken rather than a written language, an Arvanitic alphabet adapted from the Greek alphabet has been developed for Arvanitic.