{{Infobox Language
|name=Aragonese
|nativename=|region=Aragon (an autonomous community of Spain)
|speakers=10,000 (30,000 total)
|familycolor=Indo-European
|fam2=Italic
|fam3=Romance
|fam4=Italo-Western
|fam5=Pyrenean-Mozarabic
|agency=''Academia de l'Aragonés ''
|iso1=an
|iso2=arg
|iso3=arg
|sil=arg
|map=}}

Aragonese, IPA: (in English) (), is a Romance language now spoken by between 10,000 and 30,000 people over the valleys of the Aragón River, Sobrarbe and Ribagorza in the province of Huesca, Aragon, Spain. It is also colloquially known as (literally, "speech").

History
Aragonese originated around the 8th century as one of many Latin dialects developed in the Pyrenees on top of a strong Basque-like substratum. The original Kingdom of Aragon (formed by the counties of Aragon, Sobrarbe and Ribagorza) was progressively expanded from the mountain ranges towards the South, pushing the Moors further south in the ''Reconquista'' and spreading the Aragonese language.

The dynastic union of the Catalan Counties and the Kingdom of Aragon—which formed the Aragonese Crown in the 12th century—did not result in a merging of the language forms of the two territories into a single form; Catalan continued to be spoken in the east, and Aragonese in the west. The ''Aragonese'' reconquista to the south ended in the kingdom of Murcia, that was ceded by James I of Aragon to the Kingdom of Castile as a dowry for an Aragonese princess.

The spread of Castilian, now also known as Spanish, together with the
protective effect from it that Aragonese played for the Catalan language, the Castilian origin and the Trastamara dynasty and a strong similarity between Castilian and Aragonese, meant that further recession was to follow. One of the key moments in the history of Aragonese was when a king of Castilian origin was appointed in the 15th century: Ferdinand I of Aragon, also known as Ferdinand of Antequera.

The mutual union of Aragon and Castile and the progressive suspension of all capacity of self-rule from the 16th century meant that Aragonese, while still widely spoken, was limited to a rural and colloquial use, as the nobility chose Spanish as their symbol of power. The suppression of Aragonese reached its most dramatic point during the rule of Francisco Franco in the 20th century. Pupils were punished in schools for using it, and language politics in Francoist Spain forbade the teaching of any language that was not Spanish.

The constitutional democracy voted by the people in 1978 meant an increase in the literary works and studies conducted in and about the Aragonese language. However, it may be too late for this language.

Modern Aragonese
Today, Aragonese is still spoken natively within its core area, the Aragonese mountain ranges of the Pyrenees, in the comarcas of Somontano, Sobrarbe, and Ribagorza.
These are the major cities and towns where Aragonese speakers can still be found: Huesca, Graus, Monzón, Barbastro, Fonz, Echo, Estadilla, Benasque, Campo, Sabiñánigo, Jaca, Plan, Ansó, Ayerbe, Broto, El Grado.

Aragonese is also learnt as a second language by other inhabitants of the country in areas like Huesca, Zaragoza, Ejea de los Caballeros, and Teruel. According to recent polls, altogether they only make up around 30,000 speakers.

There are about 25-30 dialectal variants of Aragonese, the majority of which are in the province of Huesca, due its mountainous terrain where natural isoglosses have developed around valley enclaves, and where, not surprisingly, the highest incidence of spoken Aragonese is found. Ribagorçan, is one such variant: an eastern aragonese dialect, which is transitional to Gascon, Occitan, Catalan and Castilian.

Some historical traits of Aragonese language:
  • As in Spanish, open O,E from Romance result systematically into diphthongs , , e.g. VET'LA > ("old woman", Sp. , Cat. )

  • Loss of final unstressed -E, e.g. GRANDE > ("big")

  • Unlike Spanish, Romance initial F- is preserved, e.g. FILIU > ("son", Sp. , Cat. )

  • Romance yod (GE-,GI-,I-) results in voiceless palatal affricate ''ch'' , e.g. IUVEN > ("young man"), GELARE > ("to freeze", Sp. , Cat. )

  • Like in Occitan and Galician-Portuguese, Romance groups -ULT-, -CT- result in , e.g. FACTU > ("done", Sp. , Cat. , Gal.-Port. ), MULTU > ("many"/"much", Sp. , Cat. , Gal.-Port. ).

  • Romance groups -X-, -PS-, SCj- result into voiceless palatal fricative ''ix'' , e.g. COXU > ("crippled", Sp. , Cat. )

  • Unlike Spanish, Romance groups -Lj-, -C'L-, -T'L- result into palatal lateral ''ll'' , e.g. MULIERE > ("woman", Sp. , Cat. )), ACUT'LA > ("needle", Sp. , Cat. )

  • Unlike Spanish, Latin -B- is maintained in past imperfect endings of verbs of the 2nd and 3rd conjugations: ("he had", Sp. , Cat. ), ("he was sleeping", Sp. , Cat. )

  • Aragonese is, along with dialects of Gascon, the only Western Romance language to have preserved many of the voiceless stop consonants between vowels, e.g. CLETA > ("sheep hurdle", Cat. , Fr. ), CUCULLIATA > ''cocullata'' ("crested lark", Sp. , Cat. )


  • Phonology
    Grammar
    Aragonese grammar is similar to the grammar of other Iberian Romance languages, such as Spanish and Catalan.
    External links
  • Aragonese Course

  • Ethnologue report for Aragonese

  • Consello d'a Fabla Aragonesa

  • Aragonese language

  • See language review page on the Rosetta Project website

  • Aragonese Language Sample

  • Webster's Aragonese-English Dictionary

  • Academia de l'Aragonés

  • Category:Pyrenean-Mozarabic languages
    Category:Languages of Spain

    ar:لغة أراغونية
    an:Idioma aragonés
    frp:Aragonês
    ast:Aragonés
    bg:Арагонски език
    ca:Aragonès
    cv:Арагон чĕлхи
    cs:Aragonština
    da:Aragonisk (sprog)
    de:Aragonesische Sprache
    es:Idioma aragonés
    eo:Aragona lingvo
    eu:Aragoiera
    fr:Aragonais
    ga:Aragóinis
    gv:Aragonish
    gl:Lingua aragonesa
    hy:Առագոներեն
    id:Bahasa Aragon
    is:Aragónska
    it:Lingua aragonese
    kw:Aragonek
    la:Lingua Aragonica
    lij:Lengua aragoneise
    li:Aragonees
    hu:Aragóniai nyelv
    ms:Bahasa Aragones
    nl:Aragonees
    ja:アラゴン語
    no:Aragonesisk
    oc:Aragonés
    nds:Aragoonsche Spraak
    pl:Język aragoński
    pt:Língua aragonesa
    ro:Limba aragoneză
    ru:Арагонский язык
    se:Aragoniagiella
    simple:Aragonese language
    sr:Арагонски језик
    fi:Aragonian kieli
    sv:Aragonska
    tr:Aragonca
    zh:阿拉贡语