Romani, Welsh Language (rmw)

From Testwiki
(Redirected from Romani, Welsh Language)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Description:

Welsh Romani (or Welsh Romany; sometimes also known as Kååle) is a variety of the Romani language which was spoken fluently in Wales until at least 1950. It was spoken by the Kale group of the Romani people who arrived in Britain during the 15th century. The first record of Gypsies in Wales comes from the 16th century. Welsh-Romani belongs to the Northern Conglomeration of Romani dialects.

The majority of the vocabulary is of Indo-Aryan origin but there are a number of loanwords from other languages. Welsh loanwords include melanō ("yellow", from melyn), grīga ("heather", from grug) and kraŋka ("crab", from cranc). There are also English loanwords such as vlija ("village"), spīdra ("spider") and bråmla ("bramble"). Historically the variants of Welsh and English Romani of the Romanichal, constituted the same variant of Romani, share characteristics and are historically closely related to dialects spoken in France, Germany (Sinti), Scandinavia, Spain, Poland, North Russia and the Baltic states. Such dialects are descended from the first wave of Romani immigrants into western, northern and southern Europe in the late Middle Ages...... full article at Wikipedia

Location of Romani, Welsh Language Speakers

http://llmap.org/languages/rmw/static_map.png?width=400&height=300&kilroywashere=.png

Overview

Main Country: United Kingdom
Spoken In:

Regions: Europe

ISO 639-3 Code: rmw

Classification Taxonomy

All Languages

  Indo-European Group

    Indo-Iranian Group

      Indo-Aryan Group

        Central zone Group

          Romani Group

            Northern Romani Group

              Romani, Welsh Language