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Dialectal areas of Aragonese. The Aragonese language has many regional dialects, 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.
Map of the Occitano-Romance languages: Catalan in red, Occitan in purple and Aragonese in yellow.. Aragonese (/ ˌ ær ə ɡ ə ˈ n iː z / ARR-ə-gə-NEEZ; aragonés [aɾaɣoˈnes] in Aragonese) is a Romance language spoken in several dialects by about 12,000 people as of 2011, in the Pyrenees valleys of Aragon, Spain, primarily in the comarcas of Somontano de Barbastro, Jacetania, Alto ...
Spanish (sometimes called Castilian) is the only official language of the entire country and is spoken habitually and as a native language among a vast majority of the Spanish population. Spain is, along with Colombia [ 4 ] and after Mexico and the United States, [ 5 ] ranked third in the world as the country with the most Spanish speakers .
La Casa de Carrión is an Adobe home built in 1868 by Saturnino Carrión (27 Nov 1831 - 25 Jun 1868). [1] It is currently located in La Verne, California. The La Casa de Carrión was designated a California Historic Landmark (No. 386) on Dec. 14 1945. When La Casa de Carrión was built it was on the Rancho San Jose land.
other Spaniards, including peoples from the old Crown of Aragon (Catalans, Valencians) and other neighboring areas (Navarre, La Rioja, provinces of Soria and Guadalajara) The Aragonese ( Aragonese and Spanish : aragoneses , Catalan : aragonesos ) are the Romance people self-identified with the historical region of Aragon , in inland ...
The majority of languages of Spain [4] belong to the Romance language family, of which Spanish is the only one with official status in the whole country. [5] [6] Others, including Catalan/Valencian (in Catalonia, Valencia and the Balearic Islands) and Galician (in Galicia), enjoy official status in their respective autonomous regions, similar to Basque in the northeast of the country (a non ...
Aragon was a stronghold for the Spanish Revolution, which was a workers' social revolution that began at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 and for two to three years resulted in the widespread implementation of anarchist and, more broadly, libertarian socialist organizational principles throughout various portions of the country.
"La Academia de L'aragonés presentará en 2010 la nueva ortografía, cercana a la tradición literaria medieval", Europa Press, 5 December 2009 Mariano García (6 April 2010), "No escriba Bizén, escriba Vicent" , Heraldo de Aragón (in Spanish), archived from the original on 2011-07-16 , retrieved 2010-07-26