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Valencian (valencià) or Valencian language (llengua valenciana) is the official, historical and traditional name used in the Valencian Community of Spain to refer to the Romance language also known as Catalan, either as a whole or in its Valencia-specific linguistic forms.
- 2.4 million (2004)
El valenciano ( autoglotónimo: valencià) 3 es una lengua romance policéntrica nota 3 hablada en la Comunidad Valenciana y en la comarca de El Carche en la Región de Murcia; es hablada además bajo el glotónimo catalán en Cataluña, Islas Baleares, Andorra, la Franja de Aragón, el condado de Rosellón y la ciudad sarda de Alguer. 4 .
- 10,02 millones (2016)[1][2], Nativos2 millones [nota 3], Otros8 millones
Valencian (valencià) is the historical, traditional, and official name used in the Valencian Community for the language spoken in this region, also known as Catalan (català) in the Spanish Autonomous Communities of Catalonia, Aragon and the Balearic Islands; in the country of Andorra; in the southern French region of the Roussillon ...
Valencian at a glance. Status: official language in the Valencian Community and officially recognised as a regional language of Spain. Valencian is considered a separate language by about half the people in Valencia, while others consider it to be a variety of Catalan.
Valencian ( valencià) or Valencian language ( llengua valenciana) is the official, historical and traditional name used in the Valencian Community of Spain to refer to the Romance language also known as Catalan, either as a whole or in its Valencia-specific linguistic forms.
Etymology and pronunciation. Catalan Countries ( Països Catalans ): (In orange, strict Catalan-speaking area) NE modern Spain ( Catalonia, Valencian Community and Balearic Islands ), SE. France ( Roussillon, touching the Pyrenees) and Comune of Alghero (NW coast of Sardinia, an island belonging to Italy) Diachronic map of the Crown of Aragon.
Valencian and Spanish are the official languages of the Valencian Community. Spanish (or Castilian) is the official language of Spain, while Valencian, that is, the varieties of Catalan spoken in the Community, is the language considered by the Statute of Autonomy as llengua pròpia ("native language").