Vallos: Difference between revisions

18 bytes added ,  4 September 2023
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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===
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