Talnanian

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Talnanian
ᠯᠢᠨᠸᠠ ᠲᠠᠯᠨᠠᠨᠶᠠᠨᠠ
linva talnanyana
Flag of Talnania
Pronunciation[ˈlinva talnaˈɲana]
Created byNehster9
Date2026
SettingAlt-history Mongolia
EthnicityTalnanians
Native speakers13.8 million (2025)
Early forms
Standard form
Capitalian Talnanian
Dialect
  • Valese
Official status
Official language in
Talnania
Regulated byTalnanian Academy
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Talnanian (endonym: ᠯᠢᠨᠸᠠ ᠲᠠᠯᠨᠠᠨᠶᠠᠨᠠ, linva talnanyana [ˈlinva talnaˈɲana]​) is a Romance language spoken by the Talnanians. Compared to other Romance languages, Talnanian has derived a substantial portion of its vocabulary from Mongolian and Persian, owing to the language's primary presence in Talnania. There are approximately 13.8 million speakers worldwide.

Talnanian is partially inspired aesthetically by Romanian, which is its closest relative. Uniquely, it features heavier palatalization relative to Romanian (and indeed most other Romance languages). Furthermore, the language has lost noun declension. In spite of this, vowels are relatively conservative, and the neuter is preserved. It aims to showcase what would happen if Balkan Romance speakers had migrated to real-world Mongolia along the Silk Road.

Phonology

Consonants

Vowels

Prosody

Stress

Intonation

Phonotactics

Morphophonology

Orthography

Talnanian can be written in one of two scripts, Mongolian and Latin scripts.

Letter Name IPA Notes
ᠠ Aa a [ˈa] /a/
ᠪ Bb ᠪᠡ be [ˈbe] /b/ primarily found in borrowings
ᠺ Cc ᠺᠡ ce [ˈke] /k/
ᠴ Čč ᠴᠡ če [ˈt͡se] /t͡s/
ᠳ Dd ᠳᠡ de [ˈde] /d/
ᠡ Ee e [ˈe] /e/
ᠹ Ff ᠡᠹ ef [ˈef] /f/
ᠭ Gg ᠭᠡ ge [ˈge] /g/
ᠢ Ii i [ˈi] /i/
ᠯ Ll ᠡᠯ el [ˈel] /l/
ᠨ Nn ᠡᠨ en [ˈen] /n/
ᠨᠶ ny ᠨᠶᠡ nye [ˈɲe] /ɲ/ digraph
ᠣ Oo o [ˈɔ] /ɔ/
ᠣ Uu u [ˈu] /u/
ᠫ Pp ᠫᠡ pe [ˈpe] /p/
ᠬ Qq ᠬᠤ qu [ˈxu] /x/ exclusively found in borrowings
ᠷ Rr ᠡᠷ er [ˈer] /r/
ᠰ Ss ᠡᠰ es [ˈes] /s/
ᠲ Tt ᠲᠡ te [ˈte] /t/
ᠸ Vv ᠸᠡ ve [ˈve] /v/
ᠶ Yy ᠢ ᠭᠷᠡᠺᠠ i greca [i ˈgreka] /ʎ/
ᠵ Zz ᠵᠡᠲᠠ zeta [ˈd͡ʑeta] /d͡ʑ/
ᠽ sz ᠽᠡᠲᠠ szeta [ˈzeta] /z/ exclusively found in borrowings; in the Latin script it is a digraph

Grammar

Nouns

Every Talnanian noun belongs to one of three genders: masculine, feminine, or neuter. When a noun regards the living, the grammatical gender usually corresponds to the referent. Such words are said to be natural gender. For example, a male teacher is il ziascalo, while a female teacher is la ziascalo. The plural is usually formed by adding -s to the end of the word. However, if the word ends in a consonant cluster like that would produce an illegal collision with /s/, -es is used. For example, the plural of apa is apas, while the plural of poist is poistes.

Verbs

Verbs in Talnanian are the only part of speech that exhibit extensive morphology retained from Latin. They conjugate for person, number, mood, and tense. Talnanian is a fusional language.

Syntax

Constituent order

Noun phrase

Verb phrase

Sentence phrase

Dependent clauses

Example texts

Other resources