<Li> Verbs are inflected according to a complex morphology that marks person, number (singular or plural), tense, mood (indicative, subjunctive, imperative), and sometimes aspect or gender . Grammatical voice (active, passive, middle / reflexive) and some grammatical aspects (in particular, the perfect aspect) are expressed using periphrastic constructions, as in the Italian present perfect (passato prossimo) io ho amato / io sono stato amato "I have loved / I have been loved". </Li> <Li> Most Romance languages are null subject languages (but modern French is not, as a result of the phonetic decay of verb endings). </Li> <Li> All Romance languages have two articles (definite and indefinite), and many have in addition a partitive article (expressing the concept of "some"). In some languages (notably, French), the use of an article with a noun is nearly obligatory; it serves to express grammatical number (no longer marked on most nouns) and to cope with the extreme homophony of French vocabulary as a result of extensive sound reductions . </Li> <Li> The phonology of most Romance languages is of moderate size with few unusual phonemes . Phonemic vowel length is uncommon . Some languages have developed nasal vowels or front rounded vowels . </Li>

Is french or italian the language of love