Verse:Schngellstein/Indic heaven: Difference between revisions
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** Welsh: Loosely Ancient Greek, Togarmite, and An Yidish-inspired Brythonic | ** Welsh: Loosely Ancient Greek, Togarmite, and An Yidish-inspired Brythonic | ||
** Scottish Gaelic: quasi-Ăn Yidiș but more Icelandic | ** Scottish Gaelic: quasi-Ăn Yidiș but more Icelandic | ||
* Korean: loosely literal-Irish and Latin, very weird stop system |
Revision as of 03:54, 17 January 2022
Erd (Yiddish: ערד, German: Erde, Cantonese: dei6 kau4, Welsh: y Ddaear) is an alternate Earth timeline created by John S. Beach, an Irtan.
It would also have some differences from IRL Earth... for example no Holocaust (same for Schng's Earth)
Languages
- Germanic: "What if English was the least conservative member of an IE branch"
- Danish: even more Celtic and slurred than German
- German: Loosely Ăn Yidiș-inspired conservative Germanic (but has umlaut and uvular R instead)
- Ænglisċ: loosely Albionian consonants + literal Irish vowels
- Germanic Yiddish: "What if Ăn Yidiș (what Irtans call "Yiddish") was a closer relative of English"
- Icelandic: "What if Hivantish was Germanic"
- Swiss German? Kölsch? Luxemburgish?:
- Slavic
- Russian: "What if Albionian was way more Irish-like in phonology (but stops were voiced + unvoiced for some reason)"
- Czech: A Slavic conlang very similar to Albionian
- Polish: loosely Ăn Yidiș Slavic
- Sanskrit: A Dravidian-influenced IE with "a" mania, literal-Irish touches
- Pāli: even more Nūratambās-like
- Thai: Cuam-inspired but with a more Ancient Greek-like aesthetic with insanely long loanwords and names from Indic
- Cantonese: A Sinitic language with a more Germanic aesthetic, to Mandarin's Ăn Yidiş
- Hmong: [Hmooby FES] gibby hypothetical substrate language to Chinese
- Khmer: Mon-Khmer with Indic vocabulary
- Erd-Austronesian: Loosely Semitic-inspired morphosyntax and aesthetics; an alternate diachronics for Māori
- Romance
- Italian: Quasi-Old Nurian
- Spanish: Modern Greek gib with weird diachronics for fricatives
- Romanian: Loosely Slavic/ĂnY, with Slavic loans
- Celtic
- Welsh: Loosely Ancient Greek, Togarmite, and An Yidish-inspired Brythonic
- Scottish Gaelic: quasi-Ăn Yidiș but more Icelandic
- Korean: loosely literal-Irish and Latin, very weird stop system