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Basque (native name: Euskara) is the language spoken by the Basque people who inhabit the Pyrenees in north Spain and the adjoining area of south-western France. More specifically, the Basques occupy a Spanish autonomous community known as the Basque Country (Euskadi), which has significant cultural and political autonomy. Basques also make up sizable parts of the population in what is known as the Northern Basque Country in France and the autonomous community of Navarre in Spain. The Standard Basque name for the language is euskara; other dialectal forms are euskera, eskuara and üskara. Although geographically surrounded by Indo-European languages, Basque is believed to be a language isolate (not to be confused with an isolating language).
History and classificationThe ancestors of Basques are among the oldest inhabitants of Europe, and their origins are still unknown, as are the origins of their language itself. Many scholars have tried to link Basque to Etruscan, African languages, Caucasian languages and so on, but most scholars see Basque as a language isolate. A connection with the Iberian language gave some hope, but it is unclear whether similarities are due to genetic relations or mere vicinity. It was spoken long before the Romans brought Latin to the Iberian Peninsula, and the scarce Roman presence in the Basque area furthered the distinction. Basque however acquired Latin vocabulary before the diversification of Romance languages. The Georgian connectionThe Caucasian hypothesis is popular in Georgia as a link among Basques and Georgians; but there is little evidence for this sort of speculation. (See "Caucasian Iberia"). One of the few practical consequences is that the former mayor of Bilbao José María Gorordo made the city and the Georgian capital Tbilisi twin cities, and Euskal Telebista (Basque Television) co-produced a version of Don Quixote with the Georgian Television. Geographic distributionThe region in which Basque is spoken is smaller than what is known as the Basque Country, or Euskal Herria in Basque. Basque toponyms show that Basque was spoken further along the Pyrenees than today. For example, the name of the Aran Valley (now a Gascon-speaking part of Catalonia) suggests Basque haran, meaning "valley". However, the growing influence of Latin began to drive Basque out from less mountainous areas of this region. The Reconquista temporarily counteracted this tendency, when the Christian lords called on northern peoples — Basques, Asturians and Franks — to colonize the new conquests. Later the Basque language came to be used mainly by peasants, while people in the cities preferred Castilian, Gascon, Navarrese Romance, French or Latin for high education. Basque experienced a rapid decline in Navarre during the 19th century. However, after Basque nationalism took the language as an identity sign, and with the establishment of autonomous governments, it has made a comeback. Basque-language schools have taken the language to areas like Encartaciones or the Navarrese Ribera where it may have never been natively spoken in historic times. Dialects and Official StatusOfficial statusHistorically, Latin or Romance have been the official languages. However, Basque was explicitly recognized in some areas, as the local charter of the Basque-colonized Ojacastro valley (now in Rioja) allowed the inhabitants to use Basque in legal processes in the 13th and 14th centuries. Today Basque holds co-official language status in the Basque regions of Spain: the full autonomous community of the Basque Country and some parts of Navarre. Basque has no official standing in the Northern Basque Country of France and French citizens are barred from officially using Basque in a French court of law. Paradoxically, the use of Basque by Spanish nationals in French courts is allowed (with translation), as Basque is officially recognised on the other side of the frontier. The positions of the various existing governments, in areas where Basque usage is common, differ with regard to the promotion of Basque. The language has official status in those territories which are within the Basque Autonomous Community where it is spoken and promoted heavily, but only partially in Navarre, which is divided by the law in three distinct language areas (this law is strongly rejected by the Basque-speaking people of Navarre). DialectsThere are six main Basque dialects, comprising Biscayan, Guipuzcoan, and High Navarrese (in Spain), and Low Navarrese, Labourdin, and Souletin (in France). The dialect boundaries are not however congruent with political boundaries. One of the first scientific studies of Basque dialects, in particular the auxiliary verb forms, was made by Louis-Lucien Bonaparte (a nephew of Napoleon). Derived languagesThere is now a unified version of Euskara called Batua ("unified" in Basque), which is the language taught in schools. Batua is based largely on the Gipuzkoa regional dialect. In the 16th century, Basque sailors mixed many Basque words with a European Atlantic pidgin in their contacts with Iceland. Several travelling professional groups of Castile used Basque words in their secret jargons: examples are the gacería, the mingaña and the Galician fala dos arxinas. GrammarBasque is an ergative-absolutive language. The subject of an intransitive verb is in the absolutive case (which is unmarked), and the same case is used for the direct object of a transitive verb. The subject of the transitive verb (that is, the agent) is marked differently, with the ergative case (shown by the suffix -k). This also triggers main and auxiliary verbal agreement. The auxiliary verb which accompanies most main verbs agrees not only with the subject, but with the direct object and the indirect object, if present. Among European languages, this polypersonal system (multiple verb agreement) is only found in Basque and some Caucasian languages. The ergative-absolutive alignment is also unique among European languages, and rather rare worldwide. Consider the phrase:
Martin-ek is the agent (transitive subject), so it is marked with the ergative case ending -k (with an epenthetic -e-). Egunkariak has an -ak ending which marks plural object (plural absolutive, direct object case). The verb is erosten dizkit, in which erosten is a kind of gerund ("buying") and the auxiliary dizkit indicates:
Zuek egunkariak erosten dizkidazue The auxiliary verb is composed as di-zki-da-zue ( equivalent terms in European languages ) di- = direct object -zki- = marks plural of direct object -da- = indirect object ( to/for me ) {-t becomes -da- when intercalated.} -zue = subject ( you pl. )
Phonology
Basque has a distinction between laminal and apical articulation for the alveolar fricatives and affricates. In the laminal consonants the friction occurs across the blade of the tongue, while in apical ones, it occurs at the tip (apex). The laminal alveolar fricative is the familiar English s, and its affricate counterpart is ts. These are written with an orthographic z (z, tz). The apical fricative is written s and it is pronounced like normal s in Spain's Spanish; the corresponding affricate is ts. Basque also features postalveolar sibilants (/ʃ/, written x, and /tʃ/, written tx), sounding like English sh and ch. There are two palatal stops, voiced and unvoiced, as well as a palatal nasal and a palatal lateral (the palatal stops are not present in all dialects). These and the postalveolar sounds are typical of diminutives, which are used frequently in child language and motherese (mainly to show affection rather than size). For example, tanta "drop" vs. ttantta /ɟanɟa/ "droplet". A few common words, such as txakur /tʃakur/ "dog", use palatal sounds even though in current usage they have lost the diminutive sense; the corresponding non-palatal forms now acquiring an augmentative or pejorative sense: zakur "big dog". Many dialects of Basque exhibit a derived palatalization effect in which coronal onset consonants are changed into the palatal counterpart after the high front vowel /i/. For example, the /n/ in egin "to act" becomes palatal when the suffix -a is added: /egina/ = egiɲa "the action". The sound represented by j has a variety of realizations according to the regional dialect: j, ʝ, ɟ, ʒ, ʃ, x (the last one is typical of the Spanish Basque Country). The vowel system is the same as Spanish for most speakers. It consists of five pure vowels, /i e a o u/. Speakers of the Souletin dialect also have a sixth, front rounded vowel (represented in writing by ü but pronounced /ø/, much like a German ö), as well as a set of contrasting nasalized vowels. Stress and pitchBasque features great dialectal variation in stress, from a weak pitch-accent in the central dialects to a marked stress in some outer dialects, with varying patterns of stress placement. Stress is in general not distinctive; there are, however, a few instances where stress is phonemic, serving to distinguish between a few pairs of stress-marked words and between some grammatical forms (mainly plurals from other forms). E.g., basóà ("the forest", absolutive case) vs. básoà ("the glass", absolutive case; a borrowing from Spanish vaso); basóàk ("the forest", ergative case) vs. básoàk ("the glass", ergative case) vs. básoak ("the forests" or "the glasses", absolutive case). Given its great deal of variation among dialects, stress is not marked in the standard orthography and Euskaltzaindia only provides general recommendations for a standard placement of stress, basically to place a high-pitched weak stress (weaker than that of Spanish, let alone that of English) on the second syllable of a syntagma, and a low-pitched even-weaker stress on its last syllable, except in plural forms where stress is moved to the first syllable. This scheme provides Basque with a distinct musicality which sets its sound apart from the prosodical patterns of Spanish (which tends to stress the second-to-last syllable). Euskaldunberris ("new Basque-speakers", i.e. second-language Basque-speakers) with Spanish as their first language tend to carry the prosodical patterns of Spanish into their pronunciation of Basque, giving rise to a much despised decaffeinated pronunciation; e.g., pronouncing nire ama ("my mom") as nire áma (- - ´ -), instead of as niré amà (- ´ - `). VocabularyBy contact with neighbouring peoples, Basque has borrowed words from Latin, Spanish, French, Gascon, among others, but accepted relatively few compared to other Indo-European languages. Some claim that many of its words come from Latin, but phonetic evolution has made many of them appear nowadays as if they were native words, e.g. lore ("flower", from florem), errota ("mill", from rotam, "mill wheel"), gela ("room", from cellam). Writing systemBasque is written using the Latin alphabet. The universal special letter is ñ, sometimes ç and ü were also used. Basque does not use c, q, v, w, y except for loan words; they are not considered part of the alphabet.
dd, ll, rr, ts, tt, tx, tz are not treated as digraphs. In Sabino Arana's orthography, ll and rr were replaced with ĺ and ŕ, respectively. PhrasesBasic phrases
Advanced phrases
See alsoExternal linksGrammar
Dictionaries
References
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