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Romance languages

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Romance languages
group of Indo-European languages, direct descendants of Vulgar Latin
Q35934
Interlingua (, ) is an international auxiliary language (IAL) developed between 1937 and 1951 by the American International Auxiliary Language Association (IALA). It is a constructed language of the "naturalistic" variety, whose vocabulary, grammar, and other characteristics are derived from natural languages. Interlingua literature maintains that (written) Interlingua is comprehensible to the billions of people who speak Romance languages, though it is actively spoken by only a few hundred.
Template:Romance languages
Wikimedia template
Italo-Western
branch of the Romance languages
Brithenig
Brithenig, or also known as Comroig, is an invented language, or constructed language ("conlang"). It was created as a hobby in 1996 by Andrew Smith from New Zealand, who also invented the alternate history of Ill Bethisad to "explain" it. Officially according to the Ill Bethisad Wiki, Brithenig is classified as a Britanno-Romance language, along with other Romance languages that displaced Celtic.
La Spezia–Rimini Line
Romance isogloss in Italy
Southern Romance
group of languages
Neolatino Romance
codified pan-Romance language project
Veronese Riddle
late Latin riddle from Northern Italy
British Latin
form of Vulgar Latin spoken in Great Britain in the Roman and sub-Roman periods
Pannonian Romance
an extinct Latin Language
Proto-Romance
comparatively reconstructed language
Questione Ladina
scientific debate about Romance languages in the Alps
Three Linguistic Spaces
Reichenau Glosses
notes in a copy of the Vulgate illustrating changes in Vulgar Latin
pan-Romance language
constructed language representing Romance languages
classification of Romance languages