I think the future of Italian dialects will be difficultly predictable, but we know in the North-west are not very used, so they can be forgotten and discovered again, I’m not sure about that, but I’m sure is an heritage which our Italian native speaker we need to preservate.
This is an interesting article and it would be nice in subsequent articles or even possibly in the comments discussion to talk about how different the Latin language was in Italy during the ancient Roman era as well as some of the other languages that existed in the peninsula such as Etruscan and the relationship between them.
It’s also worth noting that some of the different dialects of Italian are still spoken amongst some of the diaspora communities of Italian immigrants in places such as Brazil.
Any language is constantly subject to metamorphosis and subsequent decay. The spread of a language depends, above all, on trade and military conquests. In the Roman Empire it was not uncommon for a citizen to speak at least three languages. There have always been official and spoken languages, with the consequent regional variations and adaptations, which end up becoming dialects when they are mixed with the original languages of the places they belong to. The Neapolitan dialect, at least the classic one that has its roots over the centuries, can now be studied, like archaeological finds, as an archaic language through the works of illustrious writers who have ventured into the creation of literary works in the vernacular. Languages evolve, but their cultural backgrounds remain available to those who are willing to study and learn them.
Great and precise article about the history of my mother language!
I think the future of Italian dialects will be difficultly predictable, but we know in the North-west are not very used, so they can be forgotten and discovered again, I’m not sure about that, but I’m sure is an heritage which our Italian native speaker we need to preservate.
This is an interesting article and it would be nice in subsequent articles or even possibly in the comments discussion to talk about how different the Latin language was in Italy during the ancient Roman era as well as some of the other languages that existed in the peninsula such as Etruscan and the relationship between them.
It’s also worth noting that some of the different dialects of Italian are still spoken amongst some of the diaspora communities of Italian immigrants in places such as Brazil.
Any language is constantly subject to metamorphosis and subsequent decay. The spread of a language depends, above all, on trade and military conquests. In the Roman Empire it was not uncommon for a citizen to speak at least three languages. There have always been official and spoken languages, with the consequent regional variations and adaptations, which end up becoming dialects when they are mixed with the original languages of the places they belong to. The Neapolitan dialect, at least the classic one that has its roots over the centuries, can now be studied, like archaeological finds, as an archaic language through the works of illustrious writers who have ventured into the creation of literary works in the vernacular. Languages evolve, but their cultural backgrounds remain available to those who are willing to study and learn them.