| Northern Romani | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution | Baltic States,Belgium,Czech Republic,England,Finland,France,Germany,Netherlands,Norway,Poland,Scotland,Sweden,Wales |
| Linguistic classification | Indo-European
|
| Language codes | |
| Glottolog | roma1330 |
Northern Romani dialects are a group of dialects of theRomani language spoken in variousNorthern,North-Western, North-Central and North-EasternEuropean countries.
The first grammatical outline of the Romani language was done on the Sinti variety.[1]
Elšík[2] uses this classification and dialect examples (geographical information from Matras[1]):
| Sub-group | Dialect | Place |
|---|---|---|
| Kā̊lē | Romnimus | North Wales |
| Romanichal | Romanes | England, Scotland |
| Kaale | (Kaalengō čib) | Finland (only about a thousand speakers)[1] |
| Northeastern | Lotfitko | Latvia[3] |
| Xaladytko | North Russian[4] | |
| Lešaki | Poland | |
| Sinto-Manuš | Prajstiko | Prussia[5] |
| Hameln Sinti | North Germany[6] | |
| Marburg Sinti | West Germany | |
| Bohemian Sinti | Czech lands before World War II | |
| Hungarian Sinti | Hungary | |
| Westphalian Sinti | Northeastern Germany | |
| Auvergne Manuš | South Central France | |
| Piedmontese Sinti | Northwest Italy | |
| Lombardian Sinti | North Italy | |
| Venetian Sinti | Northeast Italy | |
| Apennine | Abruzzian | Central Italy |
| Calabrian | South Italy |
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