Salentino dialect
Salentino is a dialect of the Sicilian language spoken in the Salento peninsula in Apulia (province of Lecce, almost all the province of Brindisi, and part of the province of Taranto).
Salentino | |
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Salentinu | |
Native to | Italy |
Region | Salento |
Native speakers | Unknown, but vulnerable (2017)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | pugl1238 [2] |
This article is part of the series on the |
Sicilian language |
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Overview
Salentino is a dialect of the Sicilian language. It is thus closer to the Southern Calabrian dialect and the dialects of Sicily than to the geographically less distant dialects of central and northern Apulia.
The traditional areas where Salentino is spoken are the aforementioned Province of Lecce, much of the southern part of the province of Brindisi, and the southern part of Taranto province.
History
The Salentino dialect is a product of the different foreign powers and populations that have washed over the peninsula over the centuries; Byzantine, Lombard, French, and Spanish influences are all, to differing levels, present in the modern dialect, but the Greek-Messapic substratum shaped definitely the phonology and the lexicon of this language. During the Middle Ages, the area was home to both Romance-based dialects - the precursors to the modern Salentino. Salentino vocabulary is a strong derivative of traditional Latin, with a strong Greek-Messapic substratum.
Characteristics
The term Salentino should be considered a general word to describe the various Romance vernaculars of the Salento peninsula, rather than one to describe a unified standard language spoken throughout the area. Indeed, in common with most other Italian languages, there are no agreed standards for spelling, grammar or pronunciation, with each locality and even generation having its own peculiarities. What unites the various local dialects of the Salento is their shared differences from the dialects further north in Apulia, such as the Tarantino and Barese dialect, and their similarities with other varieties of Sicilian, particularly those found in Calabria. In Sicily efforts have been made by the non-profit Cadèmia Siciliana to standardise the orthography for written insular Sicilian. They have also adopted a 'polycentric' approach which suggests that Salentino should have its own orthography within a family of Sicilian orthographies.[3]
See also
References
- http://www.unesco.org/languages-atlas/en/atlasmap/language-id-1614.html
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Pugliese". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- "Resolution regarding Sicilian language range, and relationship to other languages of Sicily". Cadèmia Siciliana. Retrieved 2017-12-28.