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'''Corsican Arabic''' is an Irish-influenced Arabic variety spoken in the [[Verse:Irta|Irta]] timeline's Corsica (natively ''əl-KóRSəKə'' [ɜ̟lˈqʰɔɾˁsʌqʰʌ]), an independent country where it's an official language alongside English. In Irta it's called Corsican (natively ''əl-KoRSəKī́jə'' [ɜ̟lqʰɔɾˁsʌˈqʰɪːjɜ̟] or ''ət-táNGə KoRSəKī́jə'' [ɜ̟t̪ˈt̪ʰæɴɢʌ qʰɔɾˁsʌˈqʰɪːjɜ̟]; ''táNGə'' is from Irish ''teanga''). It may also be called ''táNGəTNaN'' 'our language'. Its speakers are predominantly Catholic and usually also speak English and French. | '''Corsican Arabic''' is an Irish-influenced Arabic variety spoken in the [[Verse:Irta|Irta]] timeline's Corsica (natively ''əl-KóRSəKə'' [ɜ̟lˈqʰɔɾˁsʌqʰʌ]), an independent country where it's an official language alongside English. In Irta it's called Corsican (natively ''əl-KoRSəKī́jə'' [ɜ̟lqʰɔɾˁsʌˈqʰɪːjɜ̟] or ''ət-táNGə KoRSəKī́jə'' [ɜ̟t̪ˈt̪ʰæɴɢʌ qʰɔɾˁsʌˈqʰɪːjɜ̟]; ''táNGə'' is from Irish ''teanga''). It may also be called ''táNGəTNaN'' 'our language'. Its speakers are predominantly Catholic and usually also speak English and French. | ||
Its premise is "Maltese but with Irish (and secondarily French and Sardinian) instead of Italian", and it's the only Irtan Semitic language that evolved naturally under Celtic influence ([[Crannish]] is more Azalic, and Irta Modern Hebrew was revived by Celtic speakers), and the only Irtan Semitic language written in a Latin orthography (which is different from the one used on this page) | Its premise is "Maltese but with Irish (and secondarily French and Irta Sardinian) instead of Italian", and it's the only Irtan Semitic language that evolved naturally under Celtic influence ([[Crannish]] is more Azalic, and Irta Modern Hebrew was revived by Celtic speakers), and the only Irtan Semitic language written in a Latin orthography (which is different from the one used on this page) | ||
== History == | == History == | ||