| Genoese Dialect |
Website Links For Dialect |
Information About ™Genoese Dialect |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT GENOESE DIALECT | |
| ligurian language romance | |
| languages of italy | |
| genoa | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
|
In terms of differences from Standard Italian , Genoese exhibits some similarities with French , and there are also influences from German . The language is dying out, but is still spoken by much of the elderly population. There was a small-scale prominence of Genoese Vernacular Literature , especially in the 19th Century ; this was not sufficient enough, however, to see the development of regularization of spelling or grammar. Genoese Phonology includes but very few likenesses with French, for instance heavily nasalized vowels before nasal consonants (i.e. in VN(C) sequences), which also occur when Genoese speakers speak Standard Italian. There used to be a uvular /ʀ/ opposed to an apical /r/, but the former is to be considered vestigial if not completely extinct. There is also no (English-like) contracted approximant for /r/ (as mistakenly indicated by Forner). By far the most widespread type of /r/ today is the alveolar tap {Link without Title} (identical to unstressed Standard Italian /r/). Accent s include those to the east of Genoa (Nervi, Quinto, Quarto), to the west (Voltri, Prà, Pegli, Sestri), and in the central Polcevera Valley and Bisagno. TONGUE TWISTERS
:(Non so se il sale basta per salare la salciccia)
:(Scii, signora, sciando vola sugli sci)
:(Sul molo nuovo ci sono nove navi nuove; la più nuova delle nove navi nuove non vuole andare)
:(Gli angeli hanno occhi orecchie ed unghie come gli altri?) of the Cogorno ''comune'' . EXPRESSIONS
also
PHONOLOGY Genoese has 8 vowels, 20 consonants, and 3 semivowels. Vowels:
EXTERNAL LINKS |