Aoyého': Difference between revisions

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| familycolor = Ogbami
| familycolor = Ogbami
| fam2 = Velar Ogbami
| fam2 = Velar Ogbami
| pronunciation = jǒːxʲʏ̯ho˞
| pronunciation = jǒːxʲʏ̯ho˞]<br>[ɑwːjɛ́ʋʷoʔ
| creator = User:Jukethatbox
| creator = User:Jukethatbox
| created = 2024
| created = 2024
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==Dialects==
==Dialects==
===Tuyo'===
===Tuyo'===
<small>''Main article: [[Tuyo']]''</small><br>
Tuyo'(<small>Tuyo':</small> [[Help:IPA|[dʌ̌jo˞]]]) is the most spoken dialect of Aoyého' by native speakers, at 86,221 speakers, or around 28.7% of all native speakers of Aoyého', and it is not generally considered part of any wider dialect group. It is primarily  spoken by the Tuyo' and Dwuu peoples of the Nagša and Owhewi rivers, two tributaries of the Ogbami river.


The dialect is mostly characterised by its special use of the apostrophe: it only appears after vowels and denotes the previous vowel as [[R-colored vowel|rhotacized]]. This unique use of the apostrophe in Tuyo' is often called the "Tuyo' r" by linguistics, but it is called the ''jáásro'' in Tuyo' and the ''Dého-uurhó''(''lit.'' "Tuyo' roar") in most other dialects.
[[Category:Ogbami languages]]
[[Category:Ogbami languages]]
[[Category:Aoyého' dialects]]
[[Category:Aoyého' dialects]]
[[Category:Conlangs]]
[[Category:Conlangs]]
[[Category:Languages]]
[[Category:Languages]]

Revision as of 22:14, 21 June 2024

Aoyého'
Aoyého'
Pronunciation[jǒːxʲʏ̯ho˞]
[ɑwːjɛ́ʋʷoʔ]
Created byJukethatbox
Date2024
Ogbami
  • Velar Ogbami
    • Aoyého'
Dialects
  • Tuyo'
  • Wichita dialects
  • Ka'kreeh dialects

Aoyého'(Tuyo': [jǒːxʲʏ̯ho˞], Yuguche: [ɑwːjɛ́ʋʷoʔ])is a Velar Ogbami dialect continuum spoken by various peoples, with the Tuyo' having the most speakers as of 2024. It is the most spoken Ogbami "language"(if one considers it a singular language) by number of native speakers, with 300,000 native speakers of at least one dialect as of June 2024. It is used as a lingua franca in the Aoyetohu Nations, and it is also an official language in the Sleeping Bull Confederacy, though hundreds of other minor nations in the region have specific Aoyého' dialects as official or minority languages.

The language was first propagated by the Yasicha culture in the Age of Straw, before being replaced by the White Tracks culture that spread their dialect of the language across the Aotwaxu Basin and across the eastern Ogbami watershed via trade with the Tso-tso and Tumachee. In the Age of Clay, various empires, both local and foreign, used Aoyého' to communicate among their subjects, with regional dialects like Tuyo', the Wichita dialects and the Ka'kreeh dialects diverging around this time.

Dialects

Tuyo'

Main article: Tuyo'
Tuyo'(Tuyo': [dʌ̌jo˞]) is the most spoken dialect of Aoyého' by native speakers, at 86,221 speakers, or around 28.7% of all native speakers of Aoyého', and it is not generally considered part of any wider dialect group. It is primarily spoken by the Tuyo' and Dwuu peoples of the Nagša and Owhewi rivers, two tributaries of the Ogbami river.

The dialect is mostly characterised by its special use of the apostrophe: it only appears after vowels and denotes the previous vowel as rhotacized. This unique use of the apostrophe in Tuyo' is often called the "Tuyo' r" by linguistics, but it is called the jáásro in Tuyo' and the Dého-uurhó(lit. "Tuyo' roar") in most other dialects.