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Kabyle (Berber)
Langue
This page has been translated automatically. Berber (Tamazight in Berber) covers an immense geographical area: North Africa, Sahara-Sahel; it can be considered the indigenous language of North Africa. Berber is one of the branches of the large Chamito-Semitic (or Afro-Asiatic) linguistic family, which includes, in addition to Berber, Semitic, Cushitic, Egyptian (ancient) and, with a more distant degree of kinship, the "Chadic" group (Hausa).
Maya (Mayan languages)
Langue
This page has been translated automatically. Living, diverse and mobile societies, both rooted in tradition and exposed to globalization, steeped in a history of interculturation with both Spanish conquerors and neighboring Mayan and non-Maya Mesoamerican societies, Mayan communities are rooted in different ecological environments, with contrasting histories and diverse relationships to pre-Columbian Mayan cultures and modernity.
Macedonian
Langue
This page has been translated automatically Macedonian is the official language of the Republic of Macedonia (two million speakers, and around the same number outside its borders). Macedonian is also spoken in neighboring countries by minorities, most notably in Albania, Bulgaria and Greece, and by a large diaspora in Western Europe, America and Australia.
Rromani
Langue
This page has been translated automatically. South Asia and the Himalayas: 9 countries, over 1.6 billion inhabitants and over 1,000 languages. You can learn 10 of them at Inalco, including Rromani - the only language no longer spoken in India but in the historical diaspora of Europe and the 2 Americas.
Romanian
Langue
This page has been translated automatically. Romanian (limba română), the only Romance language taught at Inalco, is spoken by over 25 million people in Romania, the Republic of Moldova and the Romanian diaspora (Western and Eastern Europe, USA). Since Romania joined the European Union in 2007, it has been one of the country's official languages.
Slovak
Langue
This page has been translated automatically. Slovak, which became one of the official languages of the European Union in May 2004, is a young language. It is one of the West Slavic languages, like Czech and Polish, but also shares some characteristics with South and East Slavic languages.