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Trégorrois Breton

Trégorrois Breton is the dialect of Breton spoken in Trégor (Bro Dreger in Breton).

Distinguishing characteristics

Trégorrois differs from other varieties of the language in a number of ways:

  • It always uses the possessive hon whereas the other dialects use hol before l, hon before ndth and vowels, and hor before all others (these other forms are nonetheless understood because of exposure to hymns and songs, for instance)
  • After the possessive hon, Trégorrois makes a sibilant variation (e.g., where Vannetais uses /hon tu/, or Cornouaillais and Léonard hon ti, Trégorrois says hon zi)
  • The h is very aspirated (e.g., in he)
  • Different from Léonard, z is generally not pronounced (nor is it in Cornouaillais and Vannetais)
  • The tonic accent is very strong (for example, piv is pronounced /pi/)
  • Certain constructions are preferred. For instance, me a wel ac'hanoul or plijet on ouzh da welout instead of plijet on o welout ac'hanout
  • Frequently the 'd' will not transform itself into a z where it would in the other dialects (for example, ar paotr a dañs)
  • The glyph w is generally pronounced ou (e.g., war is pronounced /uar/)

There are several other pronunciation details. For example, an heol is pronounced /ãn heul/ (compare to the /ar mur/ of Kemper). This is possible in Trégorrois because the very strong aspiration of /h/ avoids any confusion with "l'huile" (eoul).

Finally, future endings are different. The future of Middle Breton was -homp, -het, -hont. Trégorrois moved from h to f (forms in -fomp, -fet, -font, etc.). (Compare with the forms -ahomp, -ahet, -ahont of Vannetais, due to the appearance of an -a- elision (pronounced /e/).

Links

This article is based on the French-language Wikipedia's article, Breton_trégorrois.

External links

Last updated: 05-09-2005 16:13:45
09-23-2007 01:00:40
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details
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