Verse:Tdūrzů/Knench: Difference between revisions

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'''Crannish''' (''Hróni'' /xɹaonɪ/ or ''núm Hrón'' /nɨːm xɹaon/) is a Semitic language spoken in the Irta timeline, spoken by the Crannish, a minority in the Maghreb and more common in Canada and the United States. Small Crannish-speaking communities exist in Israel as well. The name ''Hróni'' comes from Ancient Crannish ''kanaȝnî'' 'Canaanite' (Old Crannish ''hnānī, hrānī''). Crannish has received strong Azalic influence throughout its history since Ancient Crannish times, and in later periods Brythonic influence, and genetic studies have shown that the Crannish are descendants of Azalic speakers who adopted a Canaanite language. The language descends from a close relative of Biblical Hebrew (a divergent dialect of Phoenician?) which was spoken in Iberia, but its grammar is far more analytic than its ancestor: it was completely restructured to use auxiliaries instead of the older prefix and suffix conjugations, and it is the only Irtan Semitic language that has lost grammatical gender outside of Far East Semitic. Most modern Crannish people are Catholic; some (particularly in North America) are Muslim, Jewish or neopagan.
'''Crannish''' (''Hróni'' /xɹaonɪ/ or ''núm Hrón'' /nɨːm xɹaon/) is a Semitic language spoken in the Irta timeline, spoken by the Crannish, a minority in the Maghreb and more common in Canada and the United States. Small Crannish-speaking communities exist in Israel as well. The name ''Hróni'' comes from Ancient Crannish ''kanaȝnî'' 'Canaanite' (Old Crannish ''hnānī, hrānī''). Crannish has received strong Azalic influence throughout its history since Ancient Crannish times, and in later periods Brythonic influence, and genetic studies have shown that the Crannish are descendants of Azalic speakers who adopted a Canaanite language. The language descends from a close relative of Biblical Hebrew (a divergent dialect of Phoenician?) which was spoken in Iberia, but its grammar is far more analytic than its ancestor: it was completely restructured to use auxiliaries instead of the older prefix and suffix conjugations, and it is the only Irtan Semitic language that has lost grammatical gender outside of Far East Semitic. Most modern Crannish people are Remonitionists; some (particularly in North America) are Muslim, Jewish or neopagan.


Crannish has many Greek, Brythonic, Hivantish, Romance, and English loanwords.
Crannish has many Greek, Brythonic, Hivantish, Romance, and English loanwords.