Brenadine Tainean: Difference between revisions

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*{{nowrap|{{wp|Latin script|Latin}} ([[Brenadine Tainean alphabet]])}}
*{{nowrap|{{wp|Latin script|Latin}} ([[Brenadine Tainean alphabet]])}}
*Brenadine Tainean Braille}}
*Brenadine Tainean Braille}}
| nation          = {{flag|Almadaria}}<br>{{flag|Arona}}<br>{{flag|Rumahoki}}
| nation          = {{flag|Almadaria}}<br>{{flag|Arona}}<br>{{flag|Castedilia}}
| minority        = {{flag|Equatorial Ostiecia}}
| minority        = {{flag|Equatorial Ostiecia}}
| agency          = [[Tainean Linguistic Academy]]
| agency          = [[Tainean Linguistic Academy]]
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}}
}}


'''Brenadine Tainean''' ({{lang|bt|Tainien Brenadien}}), known in [[Almadaria]] and [[Rumahoki]] as '''Reform Tainean''' ({{lang|bt|Tainien Reforme}}), also known as '''Neo-Tainean''' ({{lang|bt|Neau-Tainien}}), is a [[Latino-Tainean language]] in the {{wp|Arawakan languages|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 [[Burgundie|Burgoignesc]] [[Equatorial Ostiecia]]. Presently, there are over over 45 million speakers of Brenadine Tainean.
'''Brenadine Tainean''' ({{lang|bt|Tainien Brenadien}}), known in [[Almadaria]] and [[Castedilia]] as '''Reform Tainean''' ({{lang|bt|Tainien Reforme}}), also known as '''Neo-Tainean''' ({{lang|bt|Neau-Tainien}}), is a [[Latino-Tainean language]] in the {{wp|Arawakan languages|Cronan language family}}. Originating in the year [[1904]], today Brenadine Tainean is an official language in [[Almadaria]], [[Arona]], and [[Castedilia]], as well as a regional language in [[Burgundie|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 peoples|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.
Tainean is named after the [[Taineans]], the descendants of an ancient [[Cronan peoples|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 [[Latinic people|Latins]] during antiquity. This creole utilised Latino-Tainean pidgins and languages as a {{wp|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 language|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 [[Equatorial Ostiecia|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 language|Tainean]] dialects as the most commonly-spoken form of Tainean by [[1952]].
[[Latino-Tainean pidgin]] began as the result of contact between the Taineans and the [[Latinic people|Latins]] during antiquity. This creole utilised Latino-Tainean pidgins and languages as a {{wp|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 language|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 [[Equatorial Ostiecia|Ostiecia]], [[Arona]], and what's now northern [[Castedilia]]. 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 Castedilia in [[1911]], displacing native [[Tainean language|Tainean]] dialects as the most commonly-spoken form of Tainean by [[1952]].


==Classification==
==Classification==
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===Aronan===
===Aronan===
===Ostiecian===
===Ostiecian===
===Rumahokian===
===Castedilian===


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