Verse:Mwtqwlqwj/Qwbmwdqwg: Difference between revisions

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'''Corsican Arabic''' is an Irish-influenced historical Arabic variety spoken in the [[Verse:Irta|Irta]] timeline's Corsica (natively ''el-Corsca'' [ə̟l{{den}}ʶˈq̟ʰɔɾʶsʶq̟ʰʌ]), an independent country where it's an official language alongside English. In Irta it's called Corsican (natively ''el-Corscaìje'' [əl{{den}}ʶq̟ʰɔɾʶsʶˈq̟ʰɪːjə̟] or ''et-teanga Corscaìje'' [ə̟t̪ˈt̪ʰæɴ̟q̟ʌ q̟ʰɔɾʶsʶˈq̟ʰɪːjə̟]). It may also be called ''teangatna'' 'our language'.  Its speakers are predominantly Catholic and almost always also speak English. Modern Standard Latin and Irish are also widely understood in Corsica.
'''Corsican Arabic''' is an Irish-influenced historical Arabic variety spoken in the [[Verse:Irta|Irta]] timeline's Corsica (natively ''el-Corsca'' [ə̟l{{den}}ʶˈq̟ʰɔɾʶsʶq̟ʰʌ]), an independent country where it's an official language alongside English. In Irta it's called Corsican (natively ''el-Corscaìje'' [əl{{den}}ʶq̟ʰɔɾʶsʶˈq̟ʰɪːjə̟] or ''et-teanga Corscaìje'' [ə̟t̪ˈt̪ʰæ̃ːʔʌ q̟ʰɔɾʶsʶˈq̟ʰɪːjə̟]). It may also be called ''teangatna'' 'our language'.  Its speakers are predominantly Catholic and almost always also speak English. Modern Standard Latin and Irish are also widely understood in Corsica.


Its premise is "Maltese but with Middle Irish and Classical Irish (and secondarily French, [[Hyperfrench|Nyvierfusiez]] and Irta Sardinian) instead of Italian", and it's the only Irtan Semitic language that evolved naturally under Celtic influence ([[Knench]] is more Azalic-influenced, 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). It also has a proposed Arabic orthography with diacritics for emphatic or non-emphatic consonants that don't exist in Classical Arabic.
Its premise is "Maltese but with Middle Irish and Classical Irish (and secondarily French, [[Hyperfrench|Nyvierfusiez]] and Irta Sardinian) instead of Italian", and it's the only Irtan Semitic language that evolved naturally under Celtic influence ([[Knench]] is more Azalic-influenced, 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). It also has a proposed Arabic orthography with diacritics for emphatic or non-emphatic consonants that don't exist in Classical Arabic.