Verse:Irta/Talma: Difference between revisions

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largely spoken in Ainbíor with an accent shifting towards Tiberian Hebbrew
largely spoken in Ainbíor with an accent shifting towards Tiberian Hebbrew


Talman Korean has no dueum beopchik; a phonemic split of rieul into ɾ/ɫ/ɺʲ from the influx of loans (native broad rieul is ɾˠ, slender rieul is ɺʲ)
Talman Korean has no dueum beopchik; a phonemic split of rieul into ɾ/ɫ/ɺʲ/lʲ from the influx of loans (native broad rieul is ɾˠ, slender rieul is ɺʲ, geminate rieul is ɫ or l̠


Lots of calques and loans from Irish (in addition to English and Hanja) in formal language; borrows Latin and Greek words via Irish. Code switching with Irish and English is common
Lots of calques and loans from Irish (in addition to English and Hanja) in formal language; borrows Latin and Greek words via Irish. Code switching with Irish and English is common

Revision as of 03:13, 23 January 2022

Crackfic Tricin's Talma (Irish: Poblacht na Talma) is a unified republic, and Irish is the dominant language in it with English a common second language. Southern and eastern parts speak Idavic, and some pockets speak Korean, Japanese, Eevo, Qazhrian, Judeo-Anbirese (assimilated Jews speak Irish and English), Ăn Yidiș, and Slavo-Windermere.


Demos

Religions: 30% Catholic, 25% irreligious, 20% Remonitionist, 10% Ngedhraist, 5% Jewish, 1% Mărotłist, 9% other

Languages

Talman English

Basically our Hiberno-English but with more Eevo syntax

Talman Irish

Our Cork Irish, with slang terms from Talmic/Lakovic and topic-prominence (from Eevo, Korean and Japanese) in broad speech

Mise tá claíomh (agam) 'I have a sword' (Standard Tá claíomh agam)

Tusa 's claíomh atá (agat), mise 's iachár atá (agam) 'You have a sword, I have a Talman machine gun' or even Tusa 's claíomh, mise 's iachár

Accent

Broad Talman Irish is influenced by Eevo, Qazhrian, Korean, and Japanese phonology; for example broad L is pronounced like Eevo L. Cultivated Talman Irish sounds identical to our conservative Cork Irish.

Talman Korean

largely spoken in Ainbíor with an accent shifting towards Tiberian Hebbrew

Talman Korean has no dueum beopchik; a phonemic split of rieul into ɾ/ɫ/ɺʲ/lʲ from the influx of loans (native broad rieul is ɾˠ, slender rieul is ɺʲ, geminate rieul is ɫ or l̠

Lots of calques and loans from Irish (in addition to English and Hanja) in formal language; borrows Latin and Greek words via Irish. Code switching with Irish and English is common

should sound stilted in a way somewhat different from English literally translated into Korean does

ㄷ ㄸ ㅌ are dental with ㅌ sometimes [θ] and the voiced allophone of ㄷ sometimes [ð], vowel system is /i e E a O o u ɨ/; /ă/ is a loan phoneme used to borrow Irish and English schwa

Non-initial post-vocalic ㅋ ㅌ ㅍ > [χ θ f]; non-initial post-vocalic ㄱ ㄷ ㅂ > [ʁ ð v]

Talman Japanese

written in our modern Japanese orthography

Talmic and Lakovic

All Talmic and Lakovic languages are endangered or extinct in Talma except:

  • Eevo
  • Slavo-Windermere
  • Judeo-Anbirese

These are spoken by highly religious groups.

Eevo

A minority language in Sceola, mainly spoken/used in liturgy by Ngedhraists

Netagin

Ouřefr

Dodellian