Jaca Aragonese
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The Aragonese language has many local varieties, which can be grouped by valley or larger ''comarca'' areas. The area where Aragonese is spoken has quite a rugged relief and is generally sparsely populated with many tracts and valleys pretty isolated from each other. In the literature about the language, the term ''dialect'' is ambiguous and can be used to refer to well-known valley varieties, such as ''cheso'' or ''ansotano''. Aragonese speakers can be classified into four groups or main dialectal areas following Francho Nagore: Western, Central, Eastern, and Southern. There is a multisecular diglossia that has favored the lack of unitary awareness among Aragonese speakers; in areas where the language has been best preserved, Aragonese speakers often use local names for their dialect.


Classification proposals


The Four Dialects

The most accepted dialectal classification is the one by Francho Nagore, who classified Aragonese varieties into 4 groups: * Western Aragonese * Central Aragonese * Eastern Aragonese * Southern Aragonese For some, these groups are considered complex dialects and their internal variations, such as Cheso or Chistabino, would be regional variants. For others, the four groups are the constituent dialects of the Aragonese language and the variants that they include would be subdialects, spoken locally or regionally.


Others

Although the Nagore classification with four dialectal areas is the most widespread, other authors have proposed alternatives. For Chusé Raúl Usón and Chabier Tomás, there would be three historical dialects that correspond more or less to the three old Pyrenean counties: * Western Dialect: County of Aragón * Central Dialect:
County of Sobrarbe A county is a geographic region of a country used for administrative or other purposesChambers Dictionary, L. Brookes (ed.), 2005, Chambers Harrap Publishers Ltd, Edinburgh in certain modern nations. The term is derived from the Old French ...
* Eastern Dialect: County of Ribagorza Fernando Sánchez proposed a classification that posits the existence of two great variants/dialects: Western and Eastern. These would also have more extreme subvarieties: * Within the Western dialect: Ansotano (and in some ways, Cheso and Ayerbense), with extreme Western characteristics, related to the ancient Navarrese romance. * Within the Eastern dialect: Ribagorzano, with many traits close to Catalan.


Eastern Aragonese

The eastern area includes a large part of the historic County of Ribagorza, plus eastern parts of Sobrarbe, and has many features in common with Catalan, with increasing similarity as one moves east. Some common features of the group are: * Latin plosive consonants become voiced between vowels: ''meligo'' (navel), ''caixigo'' (type of oak), ''forau'' (hole). * In participles, the voiced Latin -T- was later deleted, giving endings in ''-au, -iu'': ''cantau, metiu'' (sung, put in). * There is a periphrastic past perfect as in modern Catalan: ''él/ell ba cantá/cantar'' (he sang). * Conservation of the adverbial pronoun ''i'' (< IBI). * Compared to the other dialects, more cases of evolution of the Latin endings -TY, -CE, -CI, -DE to ''-u'', as in Catalan: ''peu'' (foot).


Western Aragonese

The Western Aragonese area corresponds to the Jacetania region, plus part of Alto Gállego and a few towns in Cinco Villas. Western dialects include Ansó Aragonese, Hecho Aragonese,
Aragüés Aragonese Aragüés Aragonese is the Aragonese variety spoken in Aragüés and Jasa. It is very similar to Cheso, and better preserved than Aísa Aragonese. Morphology * Define article system is ''lo'', ''la'', ''los'', ''las''. * The endings in in ...
, and
Aísa Aragonese {{Infobox language , name = Aísa Aragonese , nativename = ''Aisino'' , states = Aragon, Spain , region = Aísa, Esposa, Sinués , speakers=? , familycolor = Indo-European , fam2= Italic , fam3= Romance , ...
. Common features: * Latin plosive consonants are voiced between vowels, but with exceptions, such as ''gramito'' or ''espata''. These exceptions might be related to the Gascon dialect. * Participles, have endings in ''-au, -iu''. * The 1st and 2nd person plural pronouns are ''nos'' and ''bos''. * Dative pronouns: ''li'', ''lis''. * Adverbial pronoun ''bi'' (< IBI), equivalent to French ''y'', Catalan ''hi'', etc.


Southern Aragonese

Southern dialects include Nevalese. They are the ones more influenced by the Spanish language, and in recent times most of them have lost all but a few of their Aragonese features, merging with the Spanish dialects spoken to the south of the area.


Central Aragonese

Corresponds to part of Alto Gállego and western parts of Sobrarbe. Features: * Some instances of ''-ia-'' diphthong from Latin short E: ''fiasta'' (celebration). * Latin intervocalic stops remain voiceless much more often than in other dialects: ''capeza'' (head), ''saper'' (to know), ''lupo'' (wolf), ''ayutar'' (to help). * This conservation of voiceless stops leads to participles in ''-ato'', ''-ito''. * Voicing of voiceless stops after liquid consonant: -MP- > -mb-; -NT- > -nd-; -NK- > -ng-; -LT- > -ld-; -RT- > -rd-; -LP- > -lb-; -RK- > -rg-. These rules apply variably for different words and towns. * In some towns, definite articles ''ro, ra, ros, ras'' instead of the general Aragonese ''o, a, os, as''.


Current Classification of Regional Dialects

Western Block: * Ansotano from Ansó Valley * Cheso from Hecho Valley * Aragüesino from Aragüés and
Jasa Jasa (in Aragonese: ''Chasa'') is a municipality located in the province of Huesca, Aragon, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE INE, Ine or ine may refer to: Institutions * Institut für Nukleare Entsorgung, a German nuclear research ce ...
* Aisino from Aísa Valley * Jaqués from Jaca Central Block: * Central Western Aragonese ** Tensino from Tena Valley *** Panticuto from
Panticosa Panticosa (in Aragonese: ''Pandicosa'') is a municipality located in the province of Huesca, Aragon, Spain. During the late 19th century and early 20th century, it was a successful spa town, famous for its pure mountain waters, that supposedly cu ...
** Biescas land Aragonese ** Acumuer Valley Aragonese ** Serrablés from Serrablo ** Ballibasa Aragonese from
Yebra de Basa Yebra de Basa is a municipality located in the province of Huesca, Aragon, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE INE, Ine or ine may refer to: Institutions * Institut für Nukleare Entsorgung, a German nuclear research center * Instituto N ...
** Sobrepuerto Aragonese * Central Eastern Aragonese **
Fiscal Fiscal usually refers to government finance. In this context, it may refer to: Economics * Fiscal policy, use of government expenditure to influence economic development * Fiscal policy debate * Fiscal adjustment, a reduction in the government pr ...
Aragonese ** Bergotés from Broto Valley ** Vió Valley Aragonese ** Puértolas Valley Aragonese ** Tella Valley Aragonese ** Belsetano from Bielsa ** Sierra Ferrera Aragonese Eastern Block: * Chistabino from Gistau Valley * Fovano from
La Fueva La Fueva (in Aragonese: ''A Fueba'';As shown in thLegislative Decree 2/2006 of 27 December, of the Government of Aragon, by the revised text of the Law on Comarcal Demarcation of Aragon is approved. and officially "''La Fueva-A Fueba''"Ribagorzano Aragonese from the old County of Ribagorza ** Altorribagorzano or Benasqués or Patués from Benasque Valley ** Mediorribagorzano or Campo dialect ** Bajorribagorzano *** Grausino from Graus *** Estadillano frpm Estadilla *** Foncense from
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Southern Block: * Ayerbense from
Ayerbe :''Ayerbe is also the name of a village in the Broto municipality.'' Ayerbe is a town in the Hoya de Huesca comarca, in the autonomous community of Aragon in Spain. Geography Ayerbe is located 28 km from Huesca on highway A 132 in the directi ...
* Somontanés Aragonese from Somontano ** Navalés from
Naval A navy, naval force, or maritime force is the branch of a nation's armed forces principally designated for naval warfare, naval and amphibious warfare; namely, lake-borne, riverine, littoral zone, littoral, or ocean-borne combat operations and ...
* Aragonese from Old Sobrarbe Transition Dialects * Aragonese Spanish


Valleys and Somontano

There are different degrees of similarities between variants:


Axial Pyrenees Valleys

The topography in the form of well-separated valleys has caused the Aragonese language to have evolved into a dialect or locally spoken language in each valley:


Western and Eastern Poles

There is a distribution of differences between the East and the West, with boundaries that do not coincide, but some that appear mainly from Broto and Cotefablo to the Ribagorza and further, and others that are seen mainly from Tena and Cotefablo to Navarre.


References


See also

* Judaeo-Aragonese {{Authority control Aragonese