Vallos: Difference between revisions
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Tag: 2017 source edit |
Tag: 2017 source edit |
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====Brenadine Tainean (Reform Tainean; Neo-Tainean)==== | ====Brenadine Tainean (Reform Tainean; Neo-Tainean)==== | ||
{{main|Brenadine Tainean}} | {{main|Brenadine Tainean}} | ||
The most common form of the Tainean language is referred to usually as "Brenadine Tainean", known as "Reform Tainean" by individuals living in [[Rumahoki]], or, sometimes, as "Neo-Tainean" in [[Arona]]. It was introduced in [[1904]] following a significant reform to the structure and grammar of the Tainean language, largely along the lines of the [[Burgoignesc language]]. In addition to the "mainstream" forms of Tainean, it also included some Latino-Tainean pidgins and languages that had history going back to antiquity. Several specific Latino-Tainean innovations were used in addition to Burgoignesc style spelling and grammatical construction. The language began to be used in schools in Ostiecia beginning in [[1905]], in Arona in [[1907]], and in what's now northern Rumahoki in [[1911]]. It gradually replaced the many native Tainean regional dialects. Although Brenadine Tainean dialects would emerge, most speakers of northern Vallos now have a greater mutual intelligibility than they did with the old Tainean dialects. | The most common form of the Tainean language is referred to usually as "Brenadine Tainean", known as "Reform Tainean" by individuals living in [[Almadaria]] and [[Rumahoki]], or, sometimes, as "Neo-Tainean" in [[Arona]]. It was introduced in [[1904]] following a significant reform to the structure and grammar of the Tainean language, largely along the lines of the [[Burgoignesc language]]. In addition to the "mainstream" forms of Tainean, it also included some Latino-Tainean pidgins and languages that had history going back to antiquity. Several specific Latino-Tainean innovations were used in addition to Burgoignesc style spelling and grammatical construction. The language began to be used in schools in Ostiecia beginning in [[1905]], in Arona in [[1907]], and in what's now northern Rumahoki in [[1911]]. It gradually replaced the many native Tainean regional dialects. Although Brenadine Tainean dialects would emerge, most speakers of northern Vallos now have a greater mutual intelligibility than they did with the old Tainean dialects. | ||
===Religion=== | ===Religion=== |