Neolatino Romance Explained

Neolatino Romance, or simply called Neolatino, (Romance neolatino in Neolatin),[1] [2] is a pan-Romance language, that is, a codified linguistic variety based on Romance languages, representative of the group of Latin languages.[3] [4] It can be considered a proposal for a standard language for the entire Romance linguistic family, and at the same time a zonal constructed language, being the result of linguistic codification from a specific group, in this case, the Latin languages.[5] [6] It is important to note that this zonal language is purely within the linguistic realm, without encompassing any social or political aspects.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Palmiotta (2019)
  2. Rincón Botero (2016)
  3. Especialistas debaten la creación de un estándar románico. Universidad de Valencia, 2022 https://www.uv.es/uvweb/universitat/ca/fitxa-persona/especialistes-debaten-creacio-estandar-facilitar-comunicacio-parlants-llengues-romaniques-1285950309813/Novetat.html?id=1286260860568&plantilla=UV/Page/TPGDetaillNews
  4. Noticia en el diario El Periòdic sobre la creación de una lengua estándar neolatina https://www.elperiodic.com/val/valencia/especialistes-debaten-creacio-estandar-facilitar-comunicacio-entre-parlants-llengues-romaniques_824020
  5. Neolatin can be learned and used as a Romance Esperanto or Latin Esperanto, and can be treated as a set of recommendations for altering any Romance language to facilitate communication with other Romance speakers. It also helps Romance speakers get a better understanding of texts written in any other Romance language. (entrada en Omniglot) https://www.omniglot.com/writing/neolatin.htm
  6. Blanke (1985), p. 153.
  7. As evident in the above examples, pan-Romance international or zonal languages are less concerned with nationalistic appeals, whether simplified and cosmopolitan or zonal language schemes. None of them involve the ideological aspects inherent in the traditional sphere of linguistic influence and national expansionism. We can say that the Latin nature of pan-Romance artificial languages has limited their potential nationalist appeal, which is quite different from the pan-Germanic zonal constructed language and pan-Slavic language discussed below. Chiong Ek Lu (2021) en "The Environment of Language Creation from the Perspective of European Geopolitics: A Case Study of the Rise of Pan-nationalist Zonal Constructed Languages", en Global Academic Journal of Linguistics and Literature, Vol-3, Iss-6 pp-109-117.