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LatinRomance

LatinRomance denotes the family of languages descended from Vulgar Latin, the vernacular form of Latin spoken throughout the Roman Empire. More commonly, these languages are identified as the Romance languages; LatinRomance is a way to highlight their shared origin without implying a single language.

Origins and development: After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, regional varieties of Vulgar Latin diverged,

Common features include the loss of the Latin case system and the neuter gender, the introduction of

Major languages classified within LatinRomance include Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, Romanian, and Catalan, along with several

Global presence: due to colonization and migration, Romance languages are widely spoken across Europe, the Americas,

aided
by
geographic
isolation
and
contact
with
other
languages.
By
the
medieval
period
they
had
crystallized
into
distinct
languages,
and
by
modern
times
they
are
standardized
in
national
or
regional
forms.
The
Romance
languages
share
core
traits
from
Latin
but
differ
in
phonology,
grammar,
and
vocabulary
across
regions.
definite
articles
from
demonstratives,
simplification
of
noun
declensions,
and
the
use
of
new
verbal
tenses
and
periphrastic
constructions.
Most
lack
the
Latin
synthetic
future
and
instead
use
auxiliary
constructions;
numerous
vowels'
changes
also
mark
phonological
evolution.
Orthography
varies
by
language.
regional
languages
and
dialects.
They
are
broadly
divided
into
Western
Romance
(Spanish,
Portuguese,
French,
Italian,
Catalan)
and
Eastern
Romance
(Romanian
and
related
varieties).
Africa,
and
other
regions.
They
play
a
major
role
in
education,
media,
and
culture.
Linguists
continue
to
study
LatinRomance
to
understand
language
change,
contact,
and
how
regional
varieties
converge
and
diverge
over
time.