Istriot language

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Istriot
bumbaro, vallese, rovignese, sissanese, fasanese, gallesanese
Spoken in: Istria
Total speakers: 1,000-2,000
Language family: Indo-European
 Italic
  Romance
   Italo-Western
    Italo-Dalmatian
     Istriot
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: roa
ISO 639-3: ist

Istriot is a Romance language spoken in the Western Region on the coast of the Istrian Peninsula, especially in the towns of Rovinj (Rovigno) and Vodnjan (Dignano), on the upper northern part of the Adriatic Sea, in Croatia.

Its speakers never called it "Istriot", but it had six names after the six towns where it was spoken (in Dignano it was named "bumbaro", in Valle "vallese", in Rovigno "rovignese", in Sissano "sissanese", in Fasana "fasanese" and in Gallesano "gallesanese"). The name Istriot was given by the 19th century Italian linguist Graziadio Isaia Ascoli.

There are currently only about 1,000 speakers left, thus making it an endangered language.

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