Brenadine Tainean: Difference between revisions

From IxWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Rumahoki (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
Tag: 2017 source edit
Rumahoki (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
Tag: 2017 source edit
Line 186: Line 186:
==See also==
==See also==


{{Vallos topics}}
[[Category:Incomplete articles]]
[[Category:Incomplete articles]]
[[Category:Languages of Rumahoki]]
[[Category:Languages of Rumahoki]]
[[Category:Languages]]
[[Category:Languages]]

Revision as of 14:11, 28 June 2024

Brenadine Tainean
Neo-Tainean, Reform Tainean
Neau-Tainien, Tainien Brenadien, Tainien Reforme
RegionVallos
Native speakers
L1: 42.6 million
L2: 3.2 million
Total: 45.8 million
Early forms
Manually coded Brenadine Tainean
Official status
Official language in
 Almadaria
 Arona
 Rumahoki
Recognised minority
language in
Regulated byTainean Linguistic Academy
Language codes
ISO 639-1bt
ISO 639-2brt
ISO 639-3brt
Glottologtain1254[1]
Linguasphere82-AAA-bb
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Brenadine Tainean (Tainien Brenadien), known in Almadaria and Rumahoki as Reform Tainean (Tainien Reforme), also known as Neo-Tainean (Neau-Tainien), is a Latino-Tainean language in the Cronan language family. Originating in the year 1904, today Brenadine Tainean is an official language in Almadaria, Arona, and Rumahoki, as well as a regional language in Burgoignesc Equatorial Ostiecia. Presently, there are over over 45 million speakers of Brenadine Tainean.

Tainean is named after the Taineans, the descendants of an ancient Cronan group that migrated from Crona in the 12 Century BC via the few Heaven Ships which have managed to land in Vallos, who soon intermarried with the indigenous Vallosi people, and its speakers are called Tainophones. Brenadine Tainean accounts for over 90% of speakers of the Tainean language branch.

Latino-Tainean pidgin began as the result of contact between the Taineans and the Latins during antiquity. This creole utilised Latino-Tainean pidgins and languages as a lingua franca between the two groups. With the influx of Bergendii Protestant refugees in the 19th Century, the Latino-Tainean pidgin soon became Burgo-Tainean creole with loanwords from Burgoignesc finding their way into Tainean vocabulary. By 1900, the language had evolved into Brenado-Tainean creole, and by that time the Academy for the Preservation of Tainean Culture had decided to embark on a significant reform of the creole along the lines of Burgoignesc, most notably the use of Latino-Tainean innovations alongside Burgoignesc-style spelling and grammatical construction, and so established the multi-national Tainean Linguistic Academy in 1902, taking in Tainean intellectuals from Ostiecia, Arona, and what's now northern Rumahoki. In 1904, these reforms culminated in the birth of Brenadine Tainean, with the new language starting to be used in Ostiecian schools in 1905, in Aronan schools in 1907, and in schools in what's now northern Rumahoki in 1911, displacing native Tainean dialects as the most commonly-spoken form of Tainean by 1952.

Classification

Brenadine Tainean is a Cronan language and belongs to the Vallosi Ta-Cronan group of the Ta-Cronan languages. Tainean originated from a Ta-Cronan tribal and linguistic continuum along the northern Vallos coast, whose language gradually evolved into Latino-Tainean pidgin upon contact with the Latinic peoples from Sarpedon. This eventually evolved into Burgo-Tainean creole after the influx of Bergendii people, and by 1900 evolved into Brenado-Tainean creole which served as the basis for Brenadine Tainean.

The development of Brenadine Tainean isolated the language from the other Ta-Cronan languages and influences and even from native Tainean itself, and has since diverged considerably. Brenadine Tainean is not mutually intelligible with any of the remaining native Tainean dialect, differing in vocabulary, syntax, and phonology.

The development of Brenadine Tainean was also influenced by a long series of contact with foreign peoples with their own languages, particularly Burgoignesc. This left a profound mark of their own on the language, so that Brenadine Tainean shows some similarities in vocabulary and grammar with languages outside its linguistic clades, with Burgoignesc loanwords being mutually intelligible in sound between the two languages. Because of this, some scholars have argued that Brenadine Tainean may be considered a mixed language or a creole language much like its linguistic ancestors. Although the great influence of Burgoignesc on the vocabulary and grammar of Brenadine Tainean is widely acknowledged, most specialists in language contact do not consider Brenadine Tainean to be a true mixed language, most especially with the advent of re-Taineanisation within the Tainean Linguistic Academy throughout the 20th Century.

Brenadine Tainean is classified as a Ta-Cronan language because it shares innovations with native Tainean dialects. These shared innovations showed that the languages have descended from a single common ancestor called Cronan. Brenadine Tainean is classified as a Brenado-Tainean language because of the heavy influence of the Burgoignesc language in terms of standardisation.

History

Geographical distribution

Dialects

Almadarian

Aronan

Ostiecian

Rumahokian

Vocabulary

Phonology

Vowels

Oral vowel phonemes in Brenadine Tainean
Front Central Back
unrounded rounded
Close i y u (ou)
Close-mid e ø ə o (au)
Open-mid ɛ (ai) œ ɔ
Open a ä (a) ɑ
Nasal vowel phonemes in Brenadine Tainean
Front Back
unrounded rounded
Open-mid ɛ̃ (ai) œ̃ ɔ̃
Open ɑ̃

Consonants

Consonant phonemes in Brenadine Tainean
Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Plosive voiceless p t k (k/q)
voiced b d (d/r) g
Fricative voiceless f s (c/s) ʃ ʁ h (h/x)
voiced v z (s) ʒ (g)
Approximant plain l j (i)
labial ɥ (ou) w (gou/hou/ou)

Grammar

Writing System

See also

  1. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Brenadine Tainean". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)