Breton Language

This page is about the Breton language. For the author, see Andr Breton.
Breton (Brezhoneg) is a Celtic language spoken by some of the inhabitants of Brittany in France.
colspan="2" bgcolor="lawngreen" style="font-size:120%"|Breton (Brezhoneg)
valign="top"|Spoken in: France
valign="top"|Region: Brittany
valign="top"|Total speakers: 500,000
valign="top"|Ranking: Not in top 100
valign="top"|Genetic
classification:
Indo-European
 Celtic
  Insular
   Brythonic
    Breton
colspan="2" bgcolor="lawngreen"|Official status
valign="top"|Official language of: valign="top"| -
valign="top"|Regulated by: valign="top"| -
colspan="2" bgcolor="lawngreen"|Language codes
a href="/encyclopedia/ISO-639" title="ISO 639">ISO 639-1 br
SO 639-2 bre
a href="/encyclopedia/SIL" title="SIL">SIL BRT

History

Breton is not thought to be a modern-day descendant of any continental Celtic language such as Gaulish, though evidently it has borrowed some features from it, but it is rather descended from insular Brythonic. The other regional language (Gallo) derives from Latin. Breton is traditionally spoken in Lower Brittany, roughly to the west of a line linking Plouha and Vannes. It comes from a language community between Britain and Armorica, present day Brittany. It was the language of the elite until the 12th Century. However, afterward it was only the language of the people of West Brittany (Breizh Izel), and the nobility, then successively the bourgeoisie adopted French. As a written language, the Duchy of Brittany used Latin, switching to French in the 15th Century. It should be noted that Old Breton has left some vocabulary which has served in the present day to produce philosophical and scientific terms in Modern Breton. The French Monarchy never really concerned itself with the minority languages of France. The revolutionary period really started policies favoring French over the "regional" languages, more pejoratively called patois. It was assumed that reactionary and monarchist forces favored regional languages in an attempt to keep the peasant masses underinformed. According to the defenders of the Breton language, humiliating practices geared toward stamping out Breton lingered in schools and churches until the 1960s. Today, despite the political centralization of France and the important influence of the media, Breton is still spoken and understood by about 500,000 people. This is, however, down from 1.3 million in 1930. At the beginning of the 20th Century, half the population of Lower Brittany only knew Breton, the other half being bilingual. By 1950, there were only 100,000 monolingual Bretons. In 1925, thanks to professor Roparz Hemon, the review Gwalam came to light. During its 19 year run, it tried to raise the language to the level of other great "international" languages by creating original works covering all genres and by proposing Breton translations of internationally recognized foreign works. In 1946, Al Liamm replaced Gwalam. Other periodicals appeared and started giving Breton a fairly large body of literature for a minority language. In 1977, Diwan schools were founded to teach Breton by immersion. They taught thousands of young people from elementary school to high school. Another proposed teaching method was a bilingual approach, Div Yezh (two languages). In 2004, the Asterix comic series were translated to Breton, along with Gaulish. This is notable because, according to the comic, the village where Asterix lives is in Brittany. Some poets, linguists, and writers who wrote in Breton, for example Yann-Ber Kalloc'h, Roparz Hemon, Anjela Duval and Per-Jakez Hlias, are now known internationally. Today, Breton is the only Celtic language which is not recognized as an official language. The French state has refused to change the second article of the Constitution added in 1994 which states that "the language of the Republic is French." Each year more protesters demand the repealing of this article. The first Breton dictionary, the Catholicon, was also the first French dictionary. Edited by Jehan Lagedec in 1464, it was a trilingual work containing Breton, French and Latin. Today bilingual dictionaries directly from Breton into languages such as English, German and Spanish show the will of a new generation to gain international recognition of Breton. A monolingual dictionary also exists, defining Breton words in Breton.

Classification

Breton, along with Cornish and Welsh, is a member of the Brythonic languages, a subgroup of the Insular subgroup of the Celtic branch of the Indo-European language family.

Geographic distribution

Breton is spoken mainly in Western Brittany, but also dispersed in Eastern Brittany, and in areas around the world where there are Breton emigrants.

Official status

Breton is not an official language of France, although there is some nationalistic movement and others demanding recognition, a place in the schools, media, and public life. An attempt by the French government to incorporate the independent Breton-language immersion schools (called Diwan) into the state education system was blocked by the French Constitutional Council on the grounds that, as the Constitution of the 5th Republic states that French is the language of the Republic, no other language may be used as a language of instruction in state schools. The Toubon Law states that French is the language of public education. However, the regional and departmental authorities, in as far as they feel able, use Breton to a limited extent in signage (especially for tourism reasons). Some bilingual signage may be seen - for example city road signs in Breton towns, and one station of the Rennes metro system has signage in French and Breton. On the other hand, few shops or other private entities in Rennes have signs in Breton.

Dialects

The dialects of Breton identified by Ethnologists are Leonard, Tregorrois, Vannetais and Cornouaillais. There are no clear borders between those dialect areas, the language changes softly from a village to the next one.

Sounds

Grammar

Verbal Aspect

As in English and Gaelic, there are grammatical aspects for verbs in a particular tense, detailing whether or not an action is habitual. As in English, there is a distinction between the habitual form and progressive aspect:
  • Me zo o komz gant ma amezeg ("I am talking with my neighbor") ;
  • Me a gomz gant ma amezeg mintin ("I talk with my neighbor morning") ;

"Conjugated" Prepositions

As in other modern Celtic languages, Breton pronouns are fused into preceding prepositions to produce a sort of "conjugated" preposition. Below are some examples in both Breton (Lon dialect) and Irish. Breton>
b>Irish English Literal Translation
r levr zo ganin t leabhar agam I have a book A book is to-me
r banne zo ganit t deoch agat you have a drink a drink is to to-you
n urzhiataer zo ganti t romhaire aige he has a computer a computer is to-him
r bugel zo ganta t piste aici she has a child a child is to-her
r c'harr zo ganeomp t carr againn we have a car a car is to-us
r stilo zo ganeoc'h t teach agaibh you pl have a house a house is to-you pl
rc'hant zo ganto t airgead acu they have money money is to-them

Initial consonant mutations

Breton has four initial consonant mutations: though it lacks the nasal mutation of Welsh, it also has a 'hard' mutation, in which voiced stops become voiceless, and a 'mixed' mutation, which is a mixture of hard and soft mutations.
|+Consonant Mutation in Breton !Unmutated Consonant!! Soft Mutation !! Spirant Mutation !! Hard Mutation !! Mixed Mutation |- |p>
||f|||| |- |t||d||z|||| |- |k||g||c'h|||| |- |b||v||||p||v |- |d||z||||t||t |- |g||c'h||||k||c'h |- |gw||w||||kw||w |- |m||v||||||v

Vocabulary

The English words dolmen and menhir have been borrowed from French, which took them supposingly from Breton. But it is not clear ; for instance, menhir is said peulvan in Breton, and dolmen is a misconstructed word in Breton (it should be said "daol ven"). Some studies state that these words take their origin in Cornish.

Writing system

Breton is written using the Latin alphabet. Breton alphabet doesn't contain the "c" letter alone, and contains a special one : "c'h", which is pronounced between the Spanish jota and a loud "H".

Examples

Visitors to Brittany may encounter words and phrases (especially on signs and posters) such as the following:
BRETON ENGLISH
deut mad oc'h welcome
Breizh Brittany
brezhoneg Breton (language)
ti, ty house
ti-kr town hall
kreizkr town centre
da bep tu all directions
skol school
skol-veur university
bagad pipe band (nearly)
fest-noz ceilidh, traditional concert/dance
kenavo goodbye
krampouezh pancakes
chistr cider
About the word "Welcome", in many places one can see signs with "Degemer mat", but actually it's a completely wrong phrase in this context, for it means "good reception". When a Breton speaker needs to say "Welcome!" to someone, he says "deut mad oc'h", "come well you(-are)". war vor atao = always at sea

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