bre ISO 639

Brezhoneg Autonyms

Breton

  • Geography

    FR Brittany region: Finistere, western Cotes-d’Armor, and western Morbihan departments; elsewhere dispersed.
  • Language Cloud

A language of France

bre
Brezhoneg
206,000 (2013 R. Milin), decreasing.
Brittany region: Finistere, western Cotes-d’Armor, and western Morbihan departments; elsewhere dispersed.
Andorra, France and Monaco
8a (Moribund). Recognized language (2013, No. 595), Education.
Indo-European, Celtic, Insular, Brythonic
Leoneg (Leonais), Tregerieg (Tregorrois), Gwenedeg (Vannetais), Kerneveg (Cornouaillais).
SVO, OVS, or, less frequently, VSO, depending on focus; prepositions; genitives, adjectives, relatives after noun heads; articles, numerals before noun heads; question word initial; topic or focus first, verb second; gender (masculine/feminine); definite and indefinite articles; verb affixes mark person, number; passives; tense; causatives and comparatives shown lexically; 24 consonants, 11 vowels; non-tonal; free stress; 4 kinds of mutation.
Strong nationalistic movement demanding recognition, a place in the schools, media, and public life. Older adults only. Shifted to French [fra].
Literacy rate in L1: 25%. An average of 15,000 students in Breton language and bilingual schools. Taught in primary and secondary schools. Radio. TV. Dictionary. Grammar. Bible: 1866–1985.
Latin script [Latn].
In 1914 reportedly 90% (about 1 million) of the population of the western half of Brittany spoke Breton. In 1945 it was about 75%, and today, in all of Brittany the most optimistic estimate would be that 20% of Bretons can speak Breton. Brittany has a population of roughly 4 million, including the department of Loire-Atlantique separated from official Brittany in 1941.
OLAC resources in and about Breton