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  1. Franco-Provençal (also Francoprovençal, Patois or Arpitan) is a language within the Gallo-Romance family, originally spoken in east-central France, western Switzerland and northwestern Italy. Franco-Provençal has several distinct dialects and is separate from but closely related to neighbouring Romance dialects (the langues d'oïl ...

  2. El idioma franco-provenzal o arpitano (en francés: franco-provençal, en francés y en arpitano: arpitan) es una lengua romance que se usa en algunas partes de Francia, Italia y Suiza. Su zona de distribución autóctona es conocida como Arpitania . Aspectos históricos, sociales y culturales. Hablantes.

    • ~147 000 en Francia y ~77 000 en otros países (mayor. Italia y Suiza)[1]​
    • m [ m ]
    • c [ ʦ ]
    • b [ b ]
  3. Speakers of the language increasingly call it Arpitan, a neologism popularised in the 1980s by the Mouvement Harpitanya, and which comes from a word meaning "alpine / mountain highlands". The language is known as Romand in Switzerland, and native speakers also call is patouès (patois) or nosta moda ("our way [of speaking]").

  4. Valdôtain (; local dialect: Valdotèn, Valdŏtèn, Valdouhtan) is a dialect of Arpitan (Franco-Provençal) spoken in the Aosta Valley in Italy, and the common language of the Aosta Valley. It is commonly known as patois or patoué.