Wiktionary:About Belarusian

This page explains considerations (beyond those covered by general policies) which apply to Belarusian entries.

Entry layout explained is the principal policy on formatting entries. This document supplements that policy.

Etymology
UNDER CONSTRUCTION

First see WT:ETY. As for the ancestors of Belarusian, there were some old discussions:
 * Beer_parlour/2017/March
 * Beer_parlour/2022/September
 * Old Ruthenian & co.

Some example entries, eventually intended to be role models of proper etymology section formatting:, , and.

Spelling
UNDER CONSTRUCTION

As a result of various historical events, the current Belarusian orthography and alphabets situation is rather complicated. But as far as the Belarusian literature in the form of the existing books and periodicals is concerned, only Łacinka, Taraškievica and the official orthography (Narkamaŭka) are relevant and have their own IANA tags.

Additionally, uncoordinated efforts of modern bureaucrats, employed by different departments, produced a number of mutually incompatible romanization schemes tailored for various niche purposes. Among these romanization schemes, the geographical names romanization and the passport names romanization are notable and can be encountered in real life on the road signs or in the passports. The geographical names romanization resembles Łacinka in the uncanny valley manner, but it isn't the real thing. Some examples:

Various automatic converters exist , but not all of them are perfectly accurate.

Classic orthography (Taraškievica)

 * Up to the middle of the 19th century, all the existing scarce printed publications in contemporary Belarusian almost exclusively used the Latin alphabet, because by that time people gave up on the cumbersome old Church-Slavonic alphabet. Anyone familiar with Łacinka can easily read and understand these texts today, though there was a certain degree of variability in spelling.
 * Then a disruptive ban of the Latin alphabet in 1859 caused some Belarusian authors to either stop trying to publish their works, resort to publishing them abroad or switch to the Cyrillic alphabet altogether, while additionally being subjected to heavy censorship in the Russian Empire. This ban was lifted in 1905 and many printed publications in Belarusian started to appear.


 * In 1918, Branisłaŭ Taraškievič published Belarusian grammar textbooks for schools in both Latin and Cyrillic scripts, which standardized and summarized the already established practices and became the basis of Taraškievica orthography. Both Latin and Cyrillic scripts were supported and a reversible mapping existed between them.


 * Since 1933, Taraškievica and the use of the Latin script got superseded and banned on the territory of the USSR, but still remained in use on the territory of Western Belarus and everywhere else.


 * Taraškievica returned to the independent Belarus around 1991 after the collapse of the USSR in the form of newspapers and published books, but didn't make it to the Belarusian schools.


 * In 2005, the modern normalization of Taraškievica was published . Since 2010 Taraškievica is officially banned on the territory of Belarus, but remains in use in printed publications outside of Belarus.

Official orthography (Narkamaŭka)

 * In 1930s the soviet authorities were engaged in jailing and executing Belarusian linguists and writers and the Belarusian orthography reform of 1933 emerged as a part of these activities. This made it highly controversial and rejected outside of the USSR, causing the current split. Additionally, this reform only supported the Cyrillic script, banning the Latin script on the territory of USSR.


 * In 1957 there was an evolutionary update of this orthography standard and it came into force in 1959 two years later. That's what the be-1959acad IANA subtag refers to.


 * In 2008 another update happened, primarily as an answer to the Taraškievica 2005 standardization. All printed publications in Belarusian were legally required to switch to it by 2010. The ban on printing or importing books and newspapers using any other orthography standard also came into force on the territory of modern Belarus.

Dzejasłovica

 * This orthography variant was in use in the literary magazine "Дзеяслоў" from 2002 and up until the 2010's ban. It combines the phonetically accurate spelling of the native Belarusian words from Taraškievica with the spelling of the foreign loanwords from Narkamaŭka, basically rejecting the Taraškievica's prescribed rules of adopting foreign loanwords. Some people are using this spelling naturally and independently on their own without even knowing that it has a name.

Criteria for inclusion
The criteria for inclusion with respect to Belarusian terms are the same as Wiktionary's general criteria for inclusion. There are a few caveats though. Almost all Belarusians learn both languages in school, but Russian is the dominant language for many people. And they are inadvertently making mistakes. Some examples:

With a strictly formalistic approach to the attestation process, it's likely possible to almost always find the required 3 citations of any arbitrary Russian word mistakenly mixed into Belarusian speech or text in the durably archived sources somewhere out there. In general it's necessary to be careful with citations, unless they are taken from the books, written by well known notable Belarusian authors. But even citations from books may be problematic if they deliberately depict speech of a foreigner for artistic purposes:



For example, the bold part of the text from the citation above is not written in Belarusian. Trasianka speakers are sometimes featured as the characters in books or skits and they don't represent the actual Belarusian language either.

Provisional guidelines (yet to be discussed in WT:BP):
 * if something looks like a transliterated Russian word and can't be found in big academic Belarusian dictionaries, then merely 3 citations from Google Books may be insufficient to attest it.