About 21,300 results
Open links in new tab
  1. historical linguistics - How did Italian manage to stay (mostly ...

    Italian is commonly cited as an example of a phonetically spelled language. It is easy to guess how an Italian word is pronounced based on the way it is written, because each written symbol highly …

  2. Italian: is there an authoritative word frequency list?

    Jul 3, 2016 · I'm having difficulty finding a good frequency list for the Italian language (lemmas, not including inflected word forms). Anyone know if there's some research or website or institute where I …

  3. Why are French, Italian, Spanish etc. listed as SVO languages?

    Feb 6, 2019 · 29 French, Spanish and Italian use SVO in clauses with non-pronominal arguments. Many languages make use of more than one kind of word order; the "canonical" order used in simplistic …

  4. indo european - Are Germanic languages closer to Italo-Celtic …

    Mar 3, 2021 · I ask because in some recent classifications, Italo-Celtic languages (like French, Spanish, Italian, Irish, and Breton), Balto-Slavic languages (like Lithuanian, Russian, Polish, and Serbo-Croat), …

  5. romance languages - Why does Italian use definite articles before ...

    Oct 29, 2017 · The Italian language is well known for using definite articles quite liberally, before dates, weekdays, numbers, in some cases even in front of personal names as it is the case of the Milanese …

  6. romance languages - Can the "dialect continuum" phenomenon be ...

    Jan 4, 2018 · A dialect continuum or dialect chain is a spread of language varieties spoken across some geographical area such that neighbouring varieties differ only slightly, but the differences accumulate …

  7. Why is English classified as a Germanic rather than Romance language?

    This (and the fact that this language can be reconstructed back to the common Proto-Germanic language that all Germanic languages go back to) is really the best direct indicator that English is …

  8. Why do Spanish and Greek have such a similar phonology?

    Dec 14, 2019 · Italian sounds just as much like Greek as Spanish does. We could measure this, with a list of features, or for example with a spoken language identification machine learning model, or …

  9. historical linguistics - Latin, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and French ...

    I find Latin, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and French constructions for number words bizarre and inconsistent (whereas in Romanian it seems they are perfectly consistent as well as in Ancient Greek).

  10. Aren't all spoken languages tonal? - Linguistics Stack Exchange

    May 2, 2022 · Now: Italian for example (which I was told is not tonal) differentiates questions from affirmations simply on how you say the sentence (while other languages have things like a different …