DIASYSTEM

In linguistics, in the field of structural dialectology, a 'diasystem' is a single genetic language which has two or more standard forms. Some dialects are often divided into separate languages due to different historical and cultural development. Other possible differences between languages include vocabulary, such as Occitan being affected by French and Catalan by Spanish words, and writing systems, such as Hindi in Devanagari and Urdu in the Arabic script, despite being mutually intelligible. Some languages are officially recognized as distinct despite having no barriers in speech, writing or lexicon, but are distinguished by legal and political factors, such as the Catalan with Valencian, and Romanian with Moldovan.
Examples include:

Bulgarian-Macedonian-Torlakian

Czech-Slovak (Czech-Slovak-Pannonian Rusyn)

Danish-Bokmål Norwegian-Nynorsk Norwegian

Filipino-Tagalog

Hindustani (Hindi-Urdu)

Irish-Scottish Gaelic

Lao-Isan

Malay (Malaysian-Indonesian)

Mandarin Chinese-Dungan

Occitano-Romance languages (Occitan-Catalan-Valencian)

Persian-Tajik-Dari

Portuguese-Galician (Portuguese-Galician)

Romanian-Moldovan

Central South Slavic (Bosnian-Croatian-Montenegrin-Serbian)

Spanish-Ladino

Tatar-Bashkir

Tuscan (Italian-Corsican)

Ukrainian-Rusyn

Uyghur-Uzbek

Contents
See also
External links

See also



Dialect continuum

Pluricentric language

Standard language

Ausbausprache - Abstandsprache - Dachsprache

External links



About Central South Slavic diasystem

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