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I've noted you misread it or I explained it badly. I was just trying to show the central position of Catalan by choosing lexicon which could be understood by someone from that area.
For instance, the third sentence could easily be understood by both Portuguese and Spaniards. But callar, deixar, buscar, apagar, cansar and matar are not verbs that the French or Italians would recognize.
In fact, medieval/literary Catalan has forms for those verbs which are more similar to the French/Italian ones.
< La Catalogne peut se passer de l'univers entier, et ses voisins ne peuvent se passer d'elle. > Voltaire
Spoken piemontŕis (langhče dialect)
[YOUTUBE]SnATEixs3vc[/YOUTUBE]
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Yep, some word are derived directly from french (and not from occitan), but very few...the ''brothers'' of piemonteis are, btw, all the gallo-romance languages: from the northern italian languages passing through occitan, french and catalan.
Btw, the dialect of the Langhe (south/east of Torino) is the most archaic, internally the piemontŕis language.
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So many different names for the butterfly in the Romance languages, but most of them sound kinda nice.
Portuguese-Galician: borboleta/bolboreta
Mirandese: paixarina
Asturian: pumarina
Spanish: mariposa
Aragonese: paxarela
Catalan: papallona
Aran Gascon: parpalhňla
Occitan: parpalhon
French: papillon
Picard: paviole
Arpitan: parpelyon
Piemontese: parpajon (Perd?)
Romansh: tgiralla
Friulian: pavee
Italian: farfalla
Neapolitan: palommella
Romanian: fluture
Sardinian: barabatula
< La Catalogne peut se passer de l'univers entier, et ses voisins ne peuvent se passer d'elle. > Voltaire
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Sounds strange, but interesting. Most are spoken very quickly and the speech is quite broken/disrupted rather than smooth flowing. Some are quite nice to listen to but they are very alerting. The Swiss one was funny, seemed slightly germanised compared to the others, and spoken a bit more slowly.
Interesting! Thanks for the videos.
Ligurian (also the images are very good)
[YOUTUBE]KoVxtw5V3GQ[/YOUTUBE]
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