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The La Spezia-Rimini Line (sometimes also referred to as the Massa-Senigallia Line), in the linguistics of the Romance languages, is a line that demarcates a number of important isoglosses that distinguish Romance languages east and south of the line from Romance languages north and west of it. Romance languages on the eastern half of it include standard Italian and the Eastern Romance languages (Romanian, Aromanian, Megleno-Romanian, Istro-Romanian), while Spanish, French, Portuguese as well as Northern Italian languages are representatives of the western group. The line is also simply the frontier between Italian proper (Eastern Romance, to the south) and Northern Italian (Western Romance, to the north). The line runs through northern Italy, from the cities of La Spezia to Rimini (some linguists say [1]that the line actually runs through Massa and Senigallia about 40 kilometers further to the south, and would more accurately be called the Massa-Senigallia Line). North and west of the line (excluding some Northern Italian varieties, such as Ligurian, which probably once had the characteristic but lost it under influence from standard Italian), the plural of nouns was drawn from the Latin accusative case, and usually ends in -s regardless of grammatical gender or declension. South and east of the line, the plurals of nouns were usually taken from the Latin nominative case, and change the vowels to form the plurals. Compare the plurals of cognate nouns in Romanian, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French and Latin:
Generally speaking the western Romance languages show common innovations that the eastern Romance languages tend to lack. Another isogloss that falls on the La Spezia-Rimini line deals with the voicing of certain consonants that occur between vowels. Thus, Latin focus/focum (meaning "fire") becomes fuoco in Italian and foc in Romanian, but fogo in Portuguese and Northern Italian dialects (Venetian) and fuego in Spanish. Voicing, softening, or loss of these consonants is characteristic of the western branch of Romance; their retention is characteristic of eastern Romance. There are, however, exceptions which undermine this isogloss: Gascon dialects in south-west France and Aragonese in northern Aragon (Spain) - i.e. theoretically Western Romance - also retain the original Latin voiceless stop between vowels. Indeed, the significance of the La Spezia-Rimini line is often challenged by specialists in within both Italian dialectology and Romance dialectology. One reason for this is that while it demarcates preservation (and expansion) of phonemic geminate consonants (Central and Southern Italy) from their simplification (in Northern Italy, Gaul, and Iberia), the areas affected do not correspond consistently with those defined by voicing criteria. Romanian, which on the basis of lack of voicing is classified with Central and Southern Italian, has undergone simplification of geminates, a defining characteristic of Western Romance. Notes
ReferencesNote that the word Lombard once upon a time (up to 1600) meant Cisalpine, but now it has narrowed in its meaning, referring only to the administrative region of Lombardy .
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