Vlax Romani
Also Known As:
Romani, Vlax, Romany, Romenes, Rom, "Gypsy", Tsigene, Romanese, Vlax Romany, Danubian, Zigeuner, European Romany, Rroma
Dialects & Varieties
  • Central Vlax Romani
  • South Albanian
  • Lovari
  • Ukraine-Moldavia
  • Machvano
  • Ghagar
  • Serbo-Bosnian
  • Sedentary Romania
  • Grekurja
  • Churari
  • Southern Vlax Romani
  • Kalderash
  • Eastern
  • Sedentary Bulgaria
  • Ukrainian Vlax Romani
  • North Albanian
  • Southern Vlax
  • Zagundzi
Vlax Romani

Language Information by Source

A Handbook of Vlax Romani

Hancock, Ian. 1995. "A Handbook of Vlax Romani." Columbus, Ohio: Slavica Publishers.

Speakers

Native or fluent speakers:
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Second-language speakers and learners
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Semi-speakers or rememberers
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Children:
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Young adults
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Older adults
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Elders
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Ethnic or community population
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Year information was gathered
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Comments on speakers
"As it is spoken in the United States and Canada, Vlax adopts items from English very freely, as well as borrowing constructions and translating idioms from that language... The codification of a constructed, standardized dialect is currently in progress by members of the Linguistic Commission of the International Romani Union."

Location and Context

Countries
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Location Description
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Government Support
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Institutional Support
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Speakers' Attitude
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Other Languages Used By The Community
None
Number of Other Language Speakers:
None
Domains of Other Languages:
None

Writing Systems

Standard orthography:
No results found.
Writing system:
Numerous systems used by different speakers
Other writing systems used:
Cyrillic-based, Pan-Vlax (Roman-based), English-Based, International Standard (Roman-based)
Comments on writing systems:
"It is a commonly-repeated fallacy that Romani is not a written language. It has, in fact, been written for over a century... the practice [of writing Romani], when it is written by people who speak it, as opposed to outsiders who study it, has usually been to employ the only spelling known to them, namely that of the principal language of the country in which the speakers live... The policy of the International Romani Union is to have one standard spelling so that any Romani speaker anywhere in the world can learn and use it... But this can only happen once the creation of a standard dialect, with a more or less agreed-upon pronunciation, has been completed. The Linguistics Commission of the International Romani Union is developing such a dialect, and has already created a standardized phonemic orthography."