Burgoignesc language

Burgoignesc is the official language of Burgundie and Yonderre. It is a divergent and insular branch of the languages belonging to the Latinum vulgare branch of the Indo-European languages that was developed in late classical antiquity and has been modified and updated to reflect modern times, with substrata from Gaelic, Istroyan, and Middle Latin.

Modern Burgoignesc

La Lengatge Burgoignesc Campagha

Campaign Burgoignesc

Pronunciation

bur'goyne-esk

Spoken in

Levantia

Ethnicity

Bergendii, Yonderian

Native speakers

448,010,000 (2037)

450 million

Language family

Romance
 * Gallo-Romance
 * Levantine-Romance
 * Modern Burgoignesc

Dialects

Prep Burgundian, Burgovinic, Wintergenian, Levantine Burgundian, Oceatic Burgundian, Brenedine, Pantalones, JOB

Writing system

Latin alphabet, Burgundian Alphabet

Official status

Official language in

Burgundie

Yonderre

Recognised minority language in

Diamavya

Mortropiv Union

Language codes

ISO 639-1

brg

ISO 639-2

ISO 639-3

?

It is a segmented language in its origins. It draws heavily on, Gaelic for its land-based, lower class, corporeal words, and then heavily on a uniquely Burgoignesc form of Vulgar Latin and Istroyan, for words that are maritime, learned, or abstract in nature. This linguistic pattern follows a very real and still common divide in Burgoignesc culture, between Burgundie real and Burgundie juridique. The formalization of a single Burgoignesc language did not occur until the 1880s.

It is notable for missing some letters from other common Levantine languages like K, Y, Z, J, and W, because the Latin alphabet brought by the Bergendii predates tribal written languages it would work through those missing sounds with diphthongs and consonant clusters. The letter U is a newer letter, dating to the 1100s as its unique appellation was forced with the differentiation of the &quot;V&quot; as a separate sound. In the 1810s there was a movement to adopt the common standard Latin alphabet, but the various dialects in Burgundie never picked up on the usages of the newer letters, so the movement failed. Being the &quot;first&quot; official language of Burgundie, all Burgoignesc students are taught to speak and write in Burgoignesc.

Contents

 * 1 History and Origins
 * 2 Grammatical Characteristics
 * 3 Phonological characteristics
 * 4 Written Language
 * 4.1 Alphabet
 * 4.2 Common Digraphs
 * 4.3 Pronouns
 * 5 Dialects and Sociolects
 * 5.1 Levantine Burgundian
 * 5.2 Oceatic Burgundian
 * 5.3 Pantalones
 * 5.4 Prep Burgundian
 * 5.5 Wintergenian
 * 5.6 Brenedine
 * 5.7 Burgovinic
 * 5.8 Joanus' Obsidian Burgoignesc
 * 6 Vocabulary
 * 6.1 Idioms
 * 6.2 Naming conventions
 * 6.2.1 Given Names
 * 6.2.2 Family Names
 * 6.3 Academia Burgones
 * 6.3.1 War on Diccionari-urba
 * 6.4 Glossary of Burgundian Terms
 * 6.4.1 /span&gt;
 * 6.4.2 A
 * 6.4.3 B
 * 6.4.4 C
 * 6.4.5 D
 * 6.4.6 E
 * 6.4.7 F
 * 6.4.8 G
 * 6.4.9 H
 * 6.4.10 I
 * 6.4.11 L
 * 6.4.12 M
 * 6.4.13 N
 * 6.4.14 O
 * 6.4.15 P
 * 6.4.16 Q
 * 6.4.17 R
 * 6.4.18 S
 * 6.4.19 T
 * 6.4.20 U
 * 6.4.21 V
 * 6.4.22 X

= History and Origins =

Latin words with &quot;-alt&quot; became &quot;-aut&quot;.

Latin ending &quot;-us&quot; was dropped.

Latin ending &quot;-um&quot; became &quot;-gne&quot; after a vowel or soft consonent, became &quot;e&quot; after a hard consonent.

During The Fraternal Wars, particularly the First and Second Fratricides, partisan music (Deric Latin: musica partigiana, Burg: music partisæ, Common Latin: partis musicæ) became very important, not only as a bonding and morale booster but after the wars to the respective countries. The tradition dates back to the medieval period but as the armies of the principalities that became Burgundie merged, the parochial folks songs of the various regiments were superseded with simple, easy to remember songs in the Burgoignesc language that taught the language as well as created an esprit d'corps. This language of the campaign become the common language of the entire nation as the returning soldiers brought it home and it bacme a mechanism of the state's attempts to form a singular central state.

= Grammatical Characteristics =

Clitic doubling

Fusional language

Two gender (-euer masculine and -iex feminine)

Two numbers (singular, plural (-s, -es))

Right branching

Subject-verb-object typology

Postpositive adjectives

= Phonological characteristics =

Pre-stopped consonants for &quot;m&quot; and &quot;n&quot;

= Written Language =

Common Digraphs
Elision is common before a letter starting with a vowel.

Pronouns
Burgundian stressed pronouns

singular

plural

1st person

eo, mi

nos

pluralis majestatis

(nosautres)

Highly formal and archaic.

2nd person

informal

tu

vos

formal

vosautre

vosautres

respectful

(vosaltres)

Archaic in most dialects.

3rd person

masculine

il

ils

feminine

el

els

reflexive

se

impersonal

home

= Dialects and Sociolects =

Oceatic Burgundian
Is a collection of similar dialects used in the disparate islands of the Burgundian thalassocracy. It is credited as being a contributing or root dialect in various other languages like Cyrine, and Cartadaniaan.

Pantalones
The Pantalonya dialectal region is the primary dialect of the city and environs of NordHalle. Formed when the NordHallish were forced to speak Burgundian in the 17th century, the dialect was recognized in 1827 by the Academia Burgones. Its influence is also seen in the Wintergenian dialect as many NordHallish people settled the island in the mid 19th century.

Prep Burgundian
Prep is a sociolect attributed to the institutes of higher education on the Isle of Burgundie but is particularly associated with the city of Vilauristre. The dialect is thought to be largely affected by most people who use it, but it has become a common and difinitiely unique dialect across the {{wpl|Intelligentsia|intelligencia of Burgundie and as such was recognized in 1997 byt the Academia Burgones.

Brenedine
Spoken primarily on Port St. Brendan, the Brenedine dialect is spoken by and named for the Brenedine people. It has noted loan words, transcribed idioms, and vocal resonance from various West Sarpic languages.

Burgovinic
The dialect spoken by Burgundian speakers from Diamavya.

 Joanus' Obsidian Burgoignesc
The standard dialect of the language in Yonderre. Also referred to as Yonderian Burgoignesc and sometimes Yonderoburgoignesc, JOB differs from modern Levantine Burgoignesc mostly by its use of Gothic loanwords. JOB and Levantine Burgoignesc are mutually intelligible, with an estimated 95 to 98% shared lexicon and only few lexical differences between the two languages. The Knights of the Order of the Obsidian Sparrow originally chose Burgoignesc as their campaign language for the invasion of Gothica in 1458 as they all spoke it, easing communication on the battlefield and thus becoming the de facto language of the Crusader state that was established afterwards.

= Vocabulary =

Naming conventions
Praenomen primus (PP), the given name, prenomen familius (PF), an ancestor you respect or whose traits you want your child to portray (like modern middle names), Nomen (NG), typically the mother's last name or lineage on her side she wants to honor, and a Nomen Familius (NF) the father's last name/lineage written PP-PF NG NF

Academia Burgones


The Academia Burgones is the pre-eminent Burgundian council for matters pertaining to the Burgundian language. The Academia was officially established in 1484 by Cardinal Lascelles, the leading proponent of the maintenance of the Burgundian language at the time. Opposed by the royal court of Culfra from its creation through the end of the Great Confessional War in 1575, it was then violently repressed for the remainder of the Culfrosi occupation. The Academia was restored as a division of the Institut de Bergendium in 1831 by Pau I.

The Academia consists of forty members, known informally as les immortels (the immortals). New members are elected by the members of the Academia itself. Academicians hold office for life, but they may resign or be dismissed for misconduct. The body has the task of acting as an official authority on the language; it is charged with publishing an official dictionary of the language. Its rulings, however, are only advisory, not binding on either the public or the government.

War on Diccionari-urba
With the advent of the internet and the proliferation of &quot;chat&quot; the use of slang versions of Burgundian words, phrases, and idioms became more pervasive. In 2017 the Academia started a concerted effort to suppress the site www.diccionari-urba.ix, a veritable compendium of slang terms. The Academia approached the Burgundian Communications Commission (BCC) annually to try to have the site blocked as a subversive and anti-social, but without success. In 2021, the Academia changed tactics and went directly to the site's advertisers and offered to pay them not to support the site. The effort was exposed on www.hellegit.ix (Burg reddit) and individual donors came to the sites aide with thousands of thalers donated in a matter of hours. In response, www.diccionari-urba.ix went to a purely donation based. This led to the creation of a separate donation site, www.mecenat.ix. Now facing an army of slacktivists, three sites, and a massive press coverage the Academia went on an open offensive. They ran candidates in myriad school board elections and created the Conference of Burgundian Language Educators (BR: Conferencie d'educadors della Lengua Burgones (CeLB)). First held in 2024 the CeLB was a summer pedagogical program and symposium of educators at all levels as well as administrative leaders of academic institutions to create an improved but more stringent language curriculum at all levels. Importantly the curriculum included an emphasis on &quot;internet language protocols&quot;. This new aspect was directed at the use of the Burgundian language in chat and the sanctity of the &quot;intact language&quot;.


 * ** &quot;In the 21st century there is no greater threat to the Burgundian language than www.diccionari-urba.ix.&quot; -Grand Chancellor of the Academia Burgones
 * &quot;Since the Mod-Trad War of the 1960s and 70s, the increasing use of slang by young Burgundians has subverted their ability to be professionals and have reduced the capacity of Burgundie to be a leader in the 21st century.&quot; -Bhanessa MacLin, Dorft School Board Chairwoman

Following the third CeLB in the summer of 2027 lobbyists went to the Citizens Court of the National Assembly and were able get a bill introduced that got rid of the learning algorithm on cellphone typing software and instituted the most rigid autocorrect possible. The list of words in the phones was preapproved by the Academia.

 Æ
While not a recognized letter in the Burgundian alphabet æ remains a part of the language.


 * æleigen- noun a foreigner, an outsider, lit. alien. From Latin alienigena.

A

 * aber- adj. rivermouth, normally a prefix in a place name (ex. Aberfort-Germais)
 * arxiduq(uhesse)- noun archduke(archduchess). It denotes a rank within the former Holy Levantine Empire, which was below that of Emperor and King and above that of a Grand Duke, Duke and Prince. The territory ruled by an Archduke or Archduchess was called an Arxiducat (Eng. Archduchy).
 * argaeoiz- adj. an inconsistent, moody prick, lit. teenager.
 * Ax-noun a naming convention for a place by a fresh water source. Ex.Le Ax-Canbon, Granblaix, and Madix. From the Kilikas Common Latin aics, from Latin aquæ.
 * axæon- noun whisky, literally water of eternal life, or aqua vitae. From Latin ax from aqua meaning water and Eclessiatical Istroyan æon meaning eternal life.

B

 * bandier- noun battalion, of 300 to 800 soldiers and is divided into a number of companies.
 * bariolague- noun machine gun. Named for the musical bowing technique (bariolage) of rapidly returning to the same note in a rapid section of music, because of the sound of the constant pounding of the fire opposed by the slamming of the bolt's force on the shoulder.
 * bariolageuer- noun machinegunner
 * bariolagesc- adj. rapid percussive sound

C

 * caminanterie-noun infantry.
 * caneton- noun duckling.
 * casteth- noun a castle. From Latin castellum &quot;a castle, fort, citadel, stronghold; fortified village,&quot; diminutive of castrum &quot;fort&quot;.
 * catascer- verb to build. From Istroyan kataskev?ázo? manufacture, fabricate, make, malt.
 * cathedrametropole- noun a cathedral, lit. the seat of the metropolitan. From the Latin cathedra cathedral and metropolitan metropolitan archbishop.
 * chef- noun head, boss, leader. From Latin capum, head.
 * circ- noun a church. From Istroyan kyriakon doma the Lord's house.
 * conestable- noun a constable. From Latin comes stabul? officer of the stables. Lowest enlisted rank in the Yonderian Defence Force.
 * cresserele- noun a kestrel.
 * custode- noun a custode. From Latin custode, a guard, protector, watchman. Title of police officers in Yonderre.

D

 * Deuagant- noun a non-sanctioned execution or a murder, lit. taken from God.
 * Deudon- noun a public execution conducted by a state or Church ordained agent of the law, lit. God-given or ordained by God, implying the righteousness of the act. The meaning has morphed over time. It was originally thought that in the cases of Church ordained executions in the Middle Ages that the meaning was &quot;given unto God&quot;, implying that upon repentance, through death the sinner/criminal would be elevated to the heavenly host. As the temporal state gained the monopoly of force following the conquest of the Isle of Burgundie by Kuhlfros and the focus of the executions because the extortion of the power of the state and the deterrence of crime the word took on its current meaning.

E

 * elfereseuer- noun 2nd lieutenenant in the Army of Burgundie. From Arabic term ?????? (al-f?ris), meaning &quot;horseman&quot; or &quot;cavalier&quot;, but specifically was the units standard bearer.
 * engenheuer-pombeuer- noun firefighter, lit. engineer-(water)pumper
 * envasir- verb to invade, more specifically to raid (the intention is that of a non-permanent action). From Latin in + vadere go or walk
 * envaseuer- noun raider, or invader. From Latin in + vadere go or walk and the masculine Burgoignesc suffix -euer meaning one who does the action.
 * Envaseuer- noun Commando. When capitalized the Envaseuer specifically those trained in Commando units and acting in that capacity.
 * envasioun- noun invasion, raid. From Latin in + vadere go or walk and the Burgoignesc suffix -ioun for creating nouns from verbs
 * espinac- noun spinach. From Old Persian ????? aspanakh. Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.

F

 * fabrege- noun factory. From Latin factor &quot;doer, maker,&quot; agent noun from past participle stem of facere &quot;to do&quot;
 * fabreuer/fabriex- noun worker. From Latin factor &quot;doer, maker&quot;
 * falco- noun falcon.
 * ferre- noun steel. From Latin ferrum &quot;iron&quot;

G

 * gast- noun pl. gasts, seaman. From Gothic, used almost exclusively in Yonderre.
 * gendaide- noun pl. gens d'aide, military humanitarians with civilian authority, lit. man at aid. From Latin gentem race, nation, people and aide aid. It is used for humanitarian and diplomatic professionals of the Observation and Treaty Corps (Burg: ??Corps d?Observacion e Tractes??).
 * gendarme- noun pl. gens d'armes, military policeman with civilian authority, lit. man at arms. From Latin gentem race, nation, people and arma weapons.
 * gendcompt- noun pl. gens de compts, militarized accountants with civilian authority, lit. man at accountancy. From Latin gentem race, nation, people and comptable accountant. It is used for financial and administrative professionals of the Observation and Treaty Corps (Burg: ??Corps d?Observacion e Tractes??).
 * gendrech- noun pl. gens des drechs, a judge in the Lazarine Court, lit. man of the law. From Latin gentem race, nation, people and directus right. It is used for legal professionals of the Observation and Treaty Corps (Burg: ??Corps d?Observacion e Tractes??).
 * gendebouq- noun pl. gens des bouqs, a member of Academia Burgones, lit. man of tomes. From Latin gentem race, nation, people and Kuhlfrosi buch book. It is used for academic professionals of the Observation and Treaty Corps (Burg: ??Corps d?Observacion e Tractes??).
 * gendemar- noun pl. gens des mars, members of the maritime community, normally of means, particularly ship captains, lit. seaman. From Latin gentem race, nation, people and mer sea. In coastal areas it was common for all ships had to be chartered by the feudal lord as they were to be built in royal ports. The custom was common in the Istroyan city-states typically as a privilege. In the middle ages this practice was continued but as a charter purchased from the harbormaster (typically the feudal lord). Nobles who afforded this privilege were deeded the title Gens des mars.
 * gendemejans- noun pl. gens des mejans, wealthy person, captain of industry, lit. man of means. From Latin gentem race, nation, people and medi?nus sea. In particular the upper middle class following the Southern Levantine Mediatization Wars and the fall of the aristocracy in southern Dericania.
 * granduq(uhesse)- noun the monarchic title of grand duke (feminine: grand duchess) ranked in order of precedence below emperor and king, and above that of a sovereign prince and sovereign duke.
 * granprince(sse)- noun the monarchic title of great prince (feminine: great princess) ranked in order of precedence below emperor and king, and above that of a sovereign prince and sovereign duke. What distinguishes it from a grand duke is that great prince was superseded by a royal title (king) or an imperial one (emperor). The chose to remain a great principality after the fall of the Holy Levantine Empire, is in recognition of the &quot;Kingdom of Heaven&quot; being the ultimate authority in Burgundie.

I

 * iunior- adj. junior. From Latin 'iunior younger, more young.
 * irange- noun orange. From Old Persian ????? (narange) tangerine. Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.

L

 * limengeteuer/limengetiex- noun longshoreman, stevedore. From Istroyan 'limenergátis dock worker.
 * lounir- verb to invade, (the intention is that of a permanent action). From Gaelic lunn with the same meaning. Lunnir and is derivatives are only used in Burgundie not used in Yonderre and other Burgoignesc speaking countries
 * louneure/louneiex- noun foreign invader to Burgundie, sometimes applied to Derians in general as a derogatory term. It is offensive in that it is a Gaelic word, a Derian word, and the Bergendii are generally considered to have been the &quot;lunneures&quot; into ancient Deric territory.
 * lounioun- noun invasion

M

 * magec- noun magic (supernatural not illusions). From Old Persian magus, a magician. Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.
 * maiorcamp- noun major, literally battlefield major, in the Army and Marines of Burgundie. From Latin (major) the highest person of a (campus) field (of battle).
 * maiordome- noun major, literally chief household service, in the Defense Intelligence, National Constabulary, and National Gendarmerie of Burgundie. From Latin (major) the highest person of a household (dom?s or domicile) staff.
 * maistre noun master. From Latin maestro, used in the Marine Yonderre for all non-comissioned officers.

N

 * neir- ad. black

O

 * omes- adj. port, normally a suffix in a place name (ex. Paleromes). From Istroyan omos protected gulf

P

 * paradis- noun paradise from Old Persian (paridaidam) walled enclosure. Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.
 * le Paradis- noun the Garden of Eden
 * passatgeuer/passatgeix- noun passenger
 * penau- adj. pl. penaux, penal
 * phrenetic-adj. crazed, wild and disorganized. From Istroyan phren?tikos, from phrenitis insanity, from phr?n mind.
 * pijama- noun pyjama, night clothes. From Old Persian ???????(pay-jameh) leg garment. Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.
 * posidofan-noun lighthouse.From the Istoryan Fanos Posideon meaning Poseidon's lamp.
 * placitate-noun chicanery, pettifoggery. From Latin placitatus &quot;impeading&quot;.
 * placitein-adj trivial,.
 * placiteuer/placitriex-noun a litigious, petty, or quarrelsome person.
 * placitier-verb to become mired in the minutia to be purposefully letigious.

R

 * real-adj. royal, pertaining to the Crown of a state, particularly of Burgundie.
 * realme noun realm
 * reng- noun military rank. From Old Persian ???(rang) color. Ancient Audonian armies were commonly ranked and dressed by color. Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.
 * rengage- noun triage. same origin as above, but applied to the ranking of patients in mass casualty incidents.

S

 * serendipitat- noun a happy accident. From Old Persian ??????? (serendip) Sri Lanka. (will need a stand in for this, potentially a province in the Audonian Caliphate?) Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.
 * sheersucar- adj. seesucker. From Old Persian ??? ? ??? (shir o shakkar) striped cloth, lit. &quot;milk and sugar&quot;. Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.
 * sipahi-noun calvaryman, typically those originating or serving in Audonia. Used primarily in the Burgoignesc Foreign Legion. From Old Persian ???? (spah) soldier. Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.

T

 * thaphita-adj. taffeta. From Old Persian ????? (taftah) woven. Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.
 * tartifle-noun potato. From Arpitan tartiflâ.

X

 * xeraz-noun Shiraz wine. From Old Persian ????? (shiraz). Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.
 * xeres-noun sherry wine. From Old Persian ????? (shiraz). Brought by the Uzdehzani refugees fleeing the Oduniyyad Caliphate in the 7th century.

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Last edited on 28 July 2020, at 18:52

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