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European LanguagesThe palpable differences in the physical traits of Europeans from north to south hadcounterparts or overlaps in language and culture. Germanic languages (Danish,German, Norwegian, Swedish) were spoken in the north; Latin languages (French,Italian, Romanian, Spanish) in the south; Slavic languages (Czech, Polish, Russian,Serbo-Croatian, Ukrainian) in the east; and Celtic languages (Breton, Gaelic, Irish,Welsh) on the northwestern fringes of the British Isles and the extreme west of France(Brittany). By the standards of modern linguistics, the definition in the early nineteenthcentury of what constitutes a “real” language was wholly inadequate; some forms ofEuropean speech that were initially dismissed as mere local dialects or peasant jargons(Slovak, Ukrainian, Yiddish) only gradually gained recognition as genuine modern languages.There were, as well, many relatively recent blends of the three main generalcategories (English is Germanic with Latin elements; Romanian mixes Latin and Slavic;Yiddish is Germanic with Hebrew and Slavic elements). A variety of alphabets wereused, too; what is today termed Roman script prevailed in most of western Europe, withminor differences, whereas Cyrillic alphabets, with significantly larger variations in theletters used, prevailed in the Slavic areas of the east, with the exceptions of Polish andCzech, which were written in Roman script. Serbo-Croatian was written in both Cyrillicdan Romawi. Yiddish digunakan Ibrani karakter, dengan sedikit modifikasi, dan dibacadari kanan ke kiri, seperti halnya dengan bahasa Ibrani.
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