Vlax Romani language

Romani dialect group of southeastern Europe From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vlax Romani varieties are spoken mainly in Southeastern Europe by the Romani people.[2] Vlax Romani can also be referred to as an independent language[3] or as one dialect of the Romani language. Vlax Romani is the second most widely spoken dialect subgroup of the Romani language worldwide, after Balkan Romani.

NativetoBosnia, Romania, Serbia, Albania, Hungary, Israel; scattered in numerous other states
Native speakers
538,480 (2002–2014)[1]
Recognised minority
languagein
Quick facts Native to, Native speakers ...
Vlax Romani
romani shib
Native toBosnia, Romania, Serbia, Albania, Hungary, Israel; scattered in numerous other states
Native speakers
538,480 (2002–2014)[1]
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3rmy
Glottologvlax1238
ELPVlax Romani
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Name

The language's name Vlax Romani was coined by British scholar Bernard Gilliat-Smith in his 1915 study on Bulgarian Romani, in which he first divided Romani dialects into Vlach and non-Vlach.[4][5] The Vlax Roma, a subgroup of the Romani people that speak the Vlax Romani language, originate from the former Roma slaves in the principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia (with the name "Vlax", which comes from "Vlach", coming from the latter), now Romania.[6]

The words Romani and Romania are false cognates, the former deriving from Romani rom – ultimately from Sanskrit word ḍoma/डोम, and the latter deriving from Romanian român – ultimately from Latin.

Classification

Vlax Romani is classified in two groups: Vlax I, or Northern Vlax (including Kalderash and Lovari), and Vlax II, or Southern Vlax.[2]

Elšík[7] uses this classification and dialect examples (geographical information from Matras[8]):

More information Sub-group, Dialect ...
Sub-group Dialect Place
Ukrainian Vlax - Ukraine
Northern Vlax Cerhari Hungary
Hungarian Lovari
Slovakia
Austrian Lovari Austria
Polish Lovari Poland
Norwegian Lovari Norway
Serbian Kalderaš Serbia
Italian Kalderaš Italy
Russian Kalderaš Russia
Taikon Kalderaš Sweden[9]
American Vlax USA
Southern Vlax Vallachian Romania
Ihtiman Bulgaria (named after the city)
Gurbet Serbia and Bosnia Gurbeti
Korça Albania (named after the city)
Italian Xoraxane Italy (Xoraxane translates as "Muslims" in the dialect)
Ajia Varvara Greece (named after a suburb of Athens)
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Writing systems

Vlax Romani is written using the Romani orthography, predominantly using the Latin alphabet with several additional characters. In the area of the former Soviet Union, however, it can also be written in the Cyrillic script.[10]

References

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