During the Carolingian age the European linguistic landscape is characterised by a high degree of diglossia: the new International Latin (where the principle "one sound - one letter" was followed) lives together with the new local languages, that begin their autonomous development. Examples of this situation can be found in glossaries, in Liturgical Latin and particularly in Gregorian Chant.
Milanese, G. F., Il “nuovo latino” carolingio: alcune testimonianze, in Finazzi, R. B., Pontani, P. (ed.), Dal mondo antico all’universo medievale: nuove modulazioni di lingue e di culture, EDUCatt, MILANO -- ITA 2013: 73- 92 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/43794]
Il “nuovo latino” carolingio: alcune testimonianze
Milanese, Guido Fabrizio
2013
Abstract
During the Carolingian age the European linguistic landscape is characterised by a high degree of diglossia: the new International Latin (where the principle "one sound - one letter" was followed) lives together with the new local languages, that begin their autonomous development. Examples of this situation can be found in glossaries, in Liturgical Latin and particularly in Gregorian Chant.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.