Romanes dialect

Sinte Manouche

Also known as: Sinti, Manush, Sinté

A northwestern Romanes variety spoken by Sinti and Manouche communities across Germany, France, the Benelux, and northern Italy. Shaped by long contact with Germanic and Romance languages.

Frequently asked questions

What language is Sinte Manouche?

Sinte Manouche is a dialect of Romanes.

Where is Sinte Manouche spoken?

Sinte Manouche is primarily spoken in Germany, France.

Which region is Sinte Manouche associated with?

Sinte Manouche is part of the Europe region on DialectAtlas.

Is Sinte Manouche known by other names?

Yes — Sinte Manouche is also referred to as Sinti, Manush, Sinté.

What are the other dialects of Romanes?

Romanes also includes Lovari, Kalderash, Arli, Gurbeti, Polish-Baltic Romani, Slovak Romani, Zargari. Each variety has its own vocabulary, pronunciation, and cultural context.

Other Romanes dialects

See on the atlas →
Zargari

Zargari Romani · Zargari Romanes · Zargar Romani

A highly endangered Romani variety spoken in and around the village of Zargar in Qazvin province of north-western Iran, west of Tehran. The community is traditionally said to have been settled in the Safavid period and is one of the easternmost Romani-speaking populations on record; the dialect retains a Romani lexical core but shows heavy contact influence from Persian and Azerbaijani Turkish in phonology, vocabulary, and grammar. Speaker numbers are small and intergenerational transmission has weakened sharply.