Breton language

Breton
brezhoneg
Bilingual sign in Huelgoat in Brittany
Pronunciation[bʁeˈzɔ̃ːnɛk], [brəhɔ̃ˈnek]
Native toBrittany (France)
RegionLower Brittany
EthnicityBretons
Native speakers
107,000 in Brittany (2024)
16,000 in Île-de-France
(Number includes students in bilingual education)
Dialects
Latin script (Breton alphabet)
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Regulated byOfis Publik ar Brezhoneg
Language codes
ISO 639-1br
ISO 639-2bre
ISO 639-3Variously:
bre – Modern Breton
xbm – Middle Breton
obt – Old Breton
xbm Middle Breton
 obt Old Breton
Glottologbret1245  Bretonic
bret1244  KLT Breton
vann1244  Gwenedeg
ELPBreton
Linguasphere50-ABB-b (varieties: 50-ABB-ba to -be)
Percentage of Breton speakers in each region of Brittany, 2018
Breton is classified as Severely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.

Breton (/ˈbrɛtən/, BRET-ən; French: [bʁətɔ̃]; endonym: brezhoneg [bʁeˈzɔ̃ːnɛk] or [bɾəhɔ̃ˈnek] in Morbihan) is a Southwestern Brittonic language of the Celtic language group spoken in Brittany, part of modern-day France. It is the only Celtic language still in use on the European mainland.

Breton is an Insular Celtic language that was brought from Great Britain to Brittany by migrating Britons during the Early Middle Ages, which makes Breton most closely related to Cornish, another Southwestern Brittonic language. Welsh and the extinct Cumbric, both Western Brittonic languages, are more distantly related, and the Goidelic languages (Irish, Manx, and Scottish Gaelic) have a slight connection due to their origins being from Insular Celtic.

Having declined from more than one million speakers around 1950 to 107,000 in 2024, Breton is classified as "severely endangered" by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger. Yet, the number of children attending bilingual classes rose 33% between 2006 and 2012 to 14,709.