Shrub woodland and the whispher of Leonese
We are back on the road and the road is untroubled by such things as people or shops or other things. Scrubby woodland and the hills ahead of us is what we have to look forward to.
Not much else to say so let's talk language. Leonese is the local language which is thought to be spoken by 20-50,000. The language is from the West Iberian which includes Castilian, Galician-Portuguese, Pyrenean-Mozarabic and Austrleonse. Leonese is scene as, essentially, a dialect of the combined Asturian and Leonese languages. On the scale of ‘Safe’ to ‘Extinct’ Leonese is two steps towards Extinction. It ‘Definitely endangered’ which is worse than ‘vulnerab;e’ but better than ‘severely endangered’ or ‘critically endangered’. For those who need to know UNESCO recon this means:
- unofficial
- without legitimized significant use in the news media
- low levels of proficiency and use
- poor social prestige
- not used as a medium of primary education
- not used in official toponyms
With that thought in our heads let us move on.
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