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- Can a Spanish speaker understand a Galician speaker, and or . . . - Reddit
Galician changes to Portuguese, but Castilian prevails in the south, even with many differences They are usually blended with Spanish Only recently, a few years ago, Galician and Catalan are learned in school, and are more standard Western Galician is not easy to understand, eastern Galician is easier
- Any way to order Rubia Gallega beef in the U. S. ? : r AskCulinary - Reddit
There are plenty of online shops but none seem to ship to the U S There is also a farm in Missouri that is raising the breed in the U S , but they…
- Learning Spanish (Galician) : r GoingToSpain - Reddit
Galician and Spanish are 2 different languages If you want to learn Spanish learn Spanish I have students from Galicia learning English and they talk Spanish
- How mutually intelligible are the regional languages of Spain? : r . . .
I tried looking for an answer on Google but couldn't find it Are Catalan, Galician, Valencian, Aragonese etc Mutually intelligible? Are they closer to dialects or individual languages? Obviously Basque is another matter, being a non-Romance language
- Portuguese and Galician? : r Portuguese - Reddit
They branched from the same stem (like Portuguese and Spanish but later in history) There are regional variants of Galician now, some virtually identical to Portuguese and others with more influences from Spanish
- How is Galician perceived amongst the wider linguistic . . . - Reddit
I'm currently writing an essay for my sociolinguistics course on the use of Galician and how it relates to the identity of its speakers I'm intrigued to learn first hand accounts of how its seen used by its speakers non-speakers How is it related to age? social standing? to fellow Galicians and wider Spain? are there standout, notable features? I will (potentially) be using these findings
- Hows life in Galicia, Spain? : r howislivingthere - Reddit
In the cities, they mostly speak Spanish and Galician is spoken in the country where grandmas sell grelos by the roadside Vigo is the biggest city, but it’s industrial and a little boring La Coruña is more like the cultural center of the area and generally a very cool city
- What goes on in this part of Spain? Why doesnt Portugal have it?
Long story short, Castile ended recognizing Portugal as independent, while Portugal stopped claiming to be kings of Galicia, instead calling themselves kings of Portugal, becoming Portugusese, and also renaming the language from Galician to Portuguese (still virtually the same language to this day, just separate dialects)
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