- Regional language
A regional language is a
language spoken in an area of anation state , whether it be a small area, a federalstate orprovince , or some wider area.Definition in international law
For the purposes of the
European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages ::"regional or minority languages" means languages that are: "
#"traditionally used within a given territory of a State by nationals of that State who form a group numerically smaller than the rest of the State's population; and "
#"different from the official language(s) of that State"Influence of number of speakers
There are many cases when a regional language can claim greater numbers of speakers than certain languages which happen to be
official language s of sovereign states. For example, Catalan (a regional language ofSpain andFrance , albeit official inAndorra ) has more speakers than Finnish or Danish. In China, Wu, spoken in southernJiangsu and northernZhejiang by more than 90 million speakers, can claim more native speakers than French, andCantonese , a regional language ofGuangdong and nearby areas inChina with more than 60 million local and overseas speakers (North America, parts ofMalaysia ), outnumbers Italian in number of speakers. Subgroups and dialects of the Min group have over 70 million speakers, mainly inFujian and in nearbyTaiwan , but also in theSoutheast Asian countries ofMalaysia andSingapore .Relationship with official languages
In some cases, a regional language may be closely related to the state's main language or
official language . For example:
*Walloon, a regional language of France andBelgium , belongs to the same family ofOïl languages as French.
*Limburgish , a regional language inGermany ,The Netherlands andBelgium has over 250,000 speakers and is closely related toLuxembourgish ,Rhinelandic andRipuarian , a member of theWest Germanic languages subgroup.
*Low Saxon (also referred to asLow German ), an officially recognized regional language inGermany andThe Netherlands , the direct descendant ofOld Saxon , in some people’s opinion two languages divided by today’sNetherlands -German border on account of Dutch influences in the west and German influences in the east; most closely related to Dutch and Frisian, more distantly to German.
*Scots, a regional language ofScotland andIreland , belongs to the same family ofWest Germanic languages as English.
* Regional languages ofSpain :Aranese ,Aragonese , Anadalusian, Leonese, Catalan, Valencian andGalician all have co-official status.
*Leonese, a regional language of Leonese Kingdom, recognized in Castile and León (Spain ), and in Miranda (Portugal) asMirandese , close to Spanish and Portuguese.
*TheFrisian languages , regional languages ofThe Netherlands andGermany , belong to the same language family as Dutch and German, but some linguists found a link with Frisian to theEnglish language .
*Romansch, a regionalRomance language with a different set of vocabulary, but related to Italian spoken in the Swiss canton ofGraubünden .
*Võro, a regional language ofEstonia , belongs to the same family ofFinno-Ugric languages as Estonian.
*Liv or Livonian is a regional language of the Balto-Slavic language family spoken in the Livonian islands ofEstonia andLatvia .*All
Chinese languages belong to the same family asStandard Mandarin (Putonghua), the national standard of the PRC. Mandarin is not mutually intelligible with them. Speakers of all of them, nevertheless, use the same standard written language (although this written language is largely based on the Mandarin dialects group)
**Wu, a regional language ofShanghai , southernJiangsu and northernZhejiang
**Cantonese, a regional language ofGuangdong
**Hakka, a regional language in southernChina , includingGuangdong ,Fujian , andTaiwan
**Min, a regional language in southeasternChina , includingFujian andTaiwan
**Xiang, a regional languageChina ’sHunan province and some surrounding areas
**Gan, a regional language in non-coastal centralChina , in and aroundJiangxi ProvinceIn other cases, a regional language may be very different from the state’s main language or official language. For example:
*Breton, a Celtic language surrounded by
Romance languages inFrance .
*Basque, a regional language inSpain andFrance , is non-Indo-European, and therefore unrelated to Spanish or French, bothRomance languages .
*Sorbian, a regional language ofGermany , is a Slavic language, and therefore only distantly (as an Indo-European language) related to German, a Germanic language.
*Gagauz, a Turkic and thus Altaic language used in theMoldova where Moldovan predominates, a Romance and thus Indo-European language.Official languages as regional languages
An official language of a country may also be spoken as a regional language in a region of a neighbouring country. For example:
*Russian, the official language of theRussian Federation , is a regional language ofUkraine (such as the autonomous republic of theCrimea ),Abkhazia ,South Ossetia and other entities.
*Catalan, the official language ofAndorra , is a regional language inSpain andFrance .
*German, an official language ofAustria ,Belgium ,Germany ,Liechtenstein ,Luxembourg andSwitzerland , is a regional language ofItaly andDenmark .
*Hungarian, a Finno-Ugric language and official inHungary , is a regional language ofRomania whose official language, Romanian is a Romance language.
*Cantonese, one of the official languages inHong Kong andMacau (both special administrative regions of thePeople's Republic of China ), is used as a regional language of the province of Guangdong,People's Republic of China .
*Afrikaans , an official language ofSouth Africa , is a regional language ofNamibia .ee also
*
Minority language
*National language
*Languages of France
*Languages of the European Union
*British-Irish Council
*Languages in the United Kingdom
*List of languages of Italy
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