Lefso

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Modernized Lefso
レ中ソ
LefsoFlag.png
The official flag of the Lefso language
Pronunciation[ˈlɛˑɸsoː]
Created byMicor558
Date2024
SettingKuril Islands
Native speakers140 Speakers (2024)
Allavian
  • Revolutionary Allavian
    • Eupraric Scripting
      • Lefso Scripting
        • Modernized Lefso
Early forms
Allavian
  • Eupraric-Japanese Scripting
    • Archaic Lefso
      • Early Lefso
        • Middle Lefso
          • Late Lefso
            • Modernized Lefso; Archives I - II
Standard form
Lefso var. (Archive III / Navoc Hook)
Dialects
  • Kanje-Dominant Dialects ("Kanje", "Antarctic Lefso")
  • Tonal-Dominant Dialects ("Lefse")
  • Slavic-Leaning Dialects ("Rusiji")
  • Japanese-Leaning Dialects ("Fukuse")
Odinya, [w:Hiragana
Official status
Official language in
[United Colonies of Eupraria]
Language codes
CLCRqle
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Introduction

Modernized Lefso (Also: “Lefso”, “Bing bong”; Native: “レ中ソ”) is a constructed language spoken by less than 1,000 individuals, Modernized Lefso is recognized as the de facto and de jure official and national language of a micronation, The United Colonies of Eupraria.

Modernized Lefso was formed as a result of five factors. The drift of English within Eupraria towards various creoles and dialects was known collectively as “Allavian”. Euprarian natives liked how pilot pens (the number one selling pen in Eupraria) glided across paper when writing Japanese. Eupraran natives began making authentic-sounding words from garbled results of Ceaser Cipher encrypted text. During Regional War Two, Fascist Italy and the Four Square Council were influenced by Japan, which quickly affected the way Allavian was written and spoken. Modernized Lefso is being changed due to constant Slavic or Japonic influence.

Modernized Lefso is quite volatile and known for being heavily influenced by Japonic and Slavic culture. Modernized Lefso is the most successful auxiliary language spoken and exchanged through Eupraria, with major influence outside these regions. Modernized Lefso is commonly spoken within spread-out pockets of land, which expand outwards - a process caused by colonialism and Euprarian imperialism.

Modernized Lefso remains the most influential conlang within the United Colonies of Eupraria, where its Sprachraum resides, Modernized Lefso has migrated out of Eupraria and formed various pidgins. Modernized Lefso was formed via constant contact with Japanese and dialects with Old Lefso, heavily influenced by Slavic languages - primarily Russian. Modernized Lefso exists on a dialect continuum with Older Lefso Varieties and Japanese.

Lefso is an agglutinative, synthetic, syllabic language with moderately complex phonotactics, phonemic vowel and consonant length, and a lexically significant pitch accent. Word order is normal subject-object-verb with grammatical particles (toppings) marking the grammatical function of words, with a topic-comment sentence structure. Phrases in Lefso are exclusively head-final and left-branching. The placement of particles is mixed, with some preceding information, while most succeed. Sentence-ending particles inflect emotional, emphatic qualities, make questions, or conclude lists. Nouns have no gender articles. Verbs are conjugated primarily for tense and voice, but not for person. Adjectives are also conjugated.

In Modernized Lefso, a unique symbol known as a “Lefse” is used to direct the tone, stress, and length of a sound in a phrase, which is what the name “Lefso” is derived from, evolved from the unification of the Hard Symbol (み - approximation), Soft Symbol (Ժ), Lenition Marking (て), and Elongation Marking (ラ) - along with tones that weren’t added until later on due to conflicting accents across all states who used Modernized Lefso as a de jure.

Modernized Lefso combines a Latin/Cyrillic/Katakana-themed abugida-alphabet (Odinya) and a modified Kanji system (Kanje) with the two Japanese writing syllabaries: Hiragana and Katakana (known under the common name “Kana”).

The flag of Modernized Lefso is a 13-pointed light yellow star positioned to “rise” above a blue rectangle with thin white on its top and bottom borders. Placed atop a red background with three uneven stripes of increasing darkness vis-a-vis distance to the top edge of the flag, and with four stars arranged in a small square-like shape on the top-left corner.

The red, white, and blue are the colors in the flag that also make up both the United Kingdom, Russia, and Japan (with just white and red); While the blue, white, and yellow are the colors in the flag that also make up the United Colonies of Eupraria–the country where it’s the de facto and de jure—also the birthplace of the language. The blue stripe with white along its top and bottom rim represents both an ocean, and a stripe of Norway–the country that celebrates with Lefse’s (the food that inspired the name of Modernized Lefso’s unique phonetic modifier character, thus the name of the Language itself). The 13-pointed Yellow star has many meanings. It’s most commonly seen as a depiction of a sun rising above an ocean; When paired with the red background, it resembles a sunrise. This showcases the meaning of Japan (Land of the Rising Sun). The star also acts as a reference to the Hatsune Miku song–Mesmerizer, which partly contributed to the Great Japonic Kick. The color of the star represents the sun at dusk, the star seen in Mesmerizer, and the exaggerated color of a Norwegian Lefse.

Phonology

CALS: Phonology

Caption text
WALS PROPERTY LEFSO VALUE
Consonant Inventories Moderately Large
Vowel Quality Inventories Large (7 - 14)
Consonant-Vowel Ratio Moderately High
Voicing in Plosives and Fricatives In both plosives and fricatives
Voicing and Gaps in Plosive Systems None missing in /p t k b d g/
Uvular Consonants None
Glottalized Consonants No glottalized consonants
Lateral Consonants /l/, no obstruent laterals
The Velar Nasal No initial velar nasal
Vowel Nasalization Contrast absent
Front Rounded Vowels None
Syllable Structure Moderately Complex
Tone Complex tone system
Fixed Stress Locations No fixed location
Weight-Sensitive Stress Unbounded: Stress can be anywhere
Weight Factors in Weight-Sensitive Stress Systems Long vowel or coda consonant
Rhythm Types Undetermined
Absence of Common Consonants All present
Presence of Uncommon Consonants None

Modernized Lefso's phonology is the system of sounds used in Lefso pronunciation. Unless otherwise noted, this covers the Navoc Hook dialect.

There is no overall consensus on the number of phonemes–with at least 12 being registered. Phonetic length and tone are significant in the language (for vowels and consonants). Some consonant clusters exist but have dwindled in number following the Great Japonic Kick. Modernized Lefso has a very significant pitch accent, where the location or absence of a pitch modification may alter the word, usually marked “excessively”. For example, in khorosho, /khrosho↓/ (okay), and /khrosho↑/ (shotgun). Tone systems are complex and are often marked differently depending on context.

Phonotactics within Modernized Lefso is influenced by layers of English, Japanese, and Russian, causing a gradient of words to form across the language.

Lexical Strata

Modernized Lefso is a blend of linguistic vocabulary, and can be broadly divided into four categories based upon origin.

Odinji

Odinji describes all native Lefso words and loanwords preceding Middle Lefso.

Nihoji

Nihoji comprises all introduced loanwords of Japanese origin within succeeding timeframes of Middle Lefso, usually introduced within the Lefso Modernizations. Consonant clusters are heavily confined, with the presence of vowel harmony.

Rusiji

Rusiji comprises all introduced Russian loanwords within timeframes succeeding Middle Lefso. Consonant clusters are exceedingly common within this category.

Foreji

Foreji comprises all introduced loanwords that don’t fall into the prior two categories.


Orthography

Consonants

Vowels

Prosody

Stress

Intonation

Phonotactics

Morphophonology

Morphology

Syntax

Constituent order

Noun phrase

Verb phrase

Sentence phrase

Dependent clauses

Example texts

Other resources