- West Iberian languages
thumb|350px|Languages of the Iberian peninsula (simplified)West Iberian is a branch of theRomance languages which includes Spanish, Ladino, theAstur-Leonese group (Asturian ,Leonese ,Extremaduran andMirandese ), and the modern descendants ofGalician-Portuguese (Galician, Portuguese, and theFala language ). According to historical linguistic analysis, these languages are significantly closer to each other in historical terms than to any other living language in the peninsula — including Catalan, the other major Romance language of theIberian Peninsula .Speakers of West Iberian languages generally claim that they are all
mutually intelligible to some extent. It is certainly true that a speaker of any of them can learn to read any other just by practicing, without formal study of the grammar. Bilingualism is quite common along the internal language boundaries of this group.Until a few centuries ago, they formed a
dialect continuum covering the western, central and southern parts of the Iberian Peninsula — excepting the Basque andCatalan speaking regions. This is still the situation in a few regions, particularly in the northern part of the Peninsula, but due to the differing sociopolitical histories of these languages (independence ofPortugal since the early 12th century, though briefly interrupted in the 16th and the 17th centuries; unification ofSpain in the 15th century under theCatholic Kings , who privileged Spanish over the other Iberian languages), Spanish and Portuguese have tended to overtake and to a large extent absorb their sister languages, while they kept diverging from each other.There is controversy over whether the members of the modern Galician-Portuguese and Astur-Leonese subgroups are
language s ordialect s. A common, though disputed, classification is to state that Portuguese and Galician are separate languages, whileAsturian ,Leonese ,Extremaduran andMirandese are dialects of anAstur-Leonese language.ee also
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Iberian Romance languages
*Iberian languages
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