Reardic creole
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| Reardish | |
|---|---|
| Jèrmànikofrañçè | |
| Pronunciation | [ʒɛʀ.ma.ni.ko.fʀɑ̃.sɛ] |
| Created by | wfosøra |
| Ethnicity | Reardic French |
French Creole
| |
| ConWorkShop | DCE |
Reardic creole (Autonym: Jèrmànikofrañçè; Reardish: [ʒɛʀ.ma.ni.ko.fʀɑ̃.sɛ]) is a French-based creole spoken by the Reardic French community in Northern France.
Reardic creole has its origins in a Reardish population that migrated to Northern France, this population was subsumed into the local French speaking population, who's language was then influenced heavily by Reardish, this was then followed by the French population engaging in heavy trade with the Reardish of Britain, leading to the development of Reardic creole.
Reardic creole is typically written in the Latin alphabet, using the Insular script, a cursive script based on French cursive is used, it modifies several letter forms to make them closer to their Insular counterpart.
Etymology
History
Phonology
Stress lies on the first syllable unless a stressed prefix is added, in which case the stress stays with the root word and the prefix is given secondary stress.
Consonants
| Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m | n | |||
| Stop | p b | t d | k g | ||
| Fricative | f v | s z | ʃ ʒ | (χ)¹ | |
| Lateral fricative | ɬ² (ɮ)³ | ||||
| Approximant | ʍ w | l | j | ||
| Trill | ʀ |
- Allophone of /ʀ/
- Allophone of /l/ in clusters with a voiceless consonant when a vowel doesn't immediately follow it (ie: ClC or Cl#) except in cases of <ll> (historically a geminated /l/)
- Allophone of /l/ in clusters with a voiced consonant when a vowel doesn't immediately follow it (ie: ClC or Cl#)
Vowels
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Length is marked by doubling the vowel letter (ie: ii).
Grammar
Nouns decline for five cases: nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, instrumental; three genders: masculine, feminine, neuter; and two numbers: singular, and plural
Pronouns decline largely for the same as nouns.
Verbs
Adjectives and Determiners
Adverbs
Numbers
Syntax
The word order, despite the language still being heavily inflectional, is strictly SOV with limited exceptions.