Verse:Irta/Tricin: Difference between revisions

Praimhín (talk | contribs)
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Praimhín (talk | contribs)
Cualand: if Thai's standard writing system can have tone marks why not Mandarin's
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Line 89: Line 89:
Cualand English has three main accents: broad, general and cultivated. Broad Cualand accents have phonemic /x/ as well as lots of Eevo words, like ''eell'' /eɪx/ "love", ''nwtxáh llys'' /nuˈtʃɑxəs/ "hello", ''cain'' /kaɪn/ "food". Even Cualand itself is often referred to simply as ''a Luav''. Cultivated Cualand English is practically British English, and General Cualand English is somewhere in between.
Cualand English has three main accents: broad, general and cultivated. Broad Cualand accents have phonemic /x/ as well as lots of Eevo words, like ''eell'' /eɪx/ "love", ''nwtxáh llys'' /nuˈtʃɑxəs/ "hello", ''cain'' /kaɪn/ "food". Even Cualand itself is often referred to simply as ''a Luav''. Cultivated Cualand English is practically British English, and General Cualand English is somewhere in between.


Other common languages in Cualand are Dodellian (more widely spoken than Eevo today), Windermere, Hivatish, Mandarin (written entirely in pinyin with tone markers), Sogdian and Shalaian.
Other common languages in Cualand are Dodellian (more widely spoken than Eevo today), Windermere, Hivatish, Mandarin (written entirely in pinyin with tone markers; hanzi isn't used in Tricin), Sogdian and Shalaian.


=== A Tuzzo Lanto ===
=== A Tuzzo Lanto ===