Lenyan: Difference between revisions

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|pronunciation = {{IPA|[ˈleɲ jən ˈtɔjnɔqɯɣ]}}<br/>{{IPA|[ˈleɲɔqɯr]}}
|pronunciation = {{IPA|[ˈleɲ jən ˈtɔjnɔqɯɣ]}}<br/>{{IPA|[ˈleɲɔqɯr]}}
|region        = Leñ-ṱef
|region        = Leñ-ṱef
|ethnicity    = Leny (''leñoqŭroʻr'')
|ethnicity    = Leñ (''leñoqŭroʻr'')
|speakers      = {{formatnum:12500000}}
|speakers      = {{formatnum:12500000}}
|date          = 6424
|date          = 6424
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|nation        = Leñ-ṱef
|nation        = Leñ-ṱef
}}
}}
'''Lenyan''', natively ''leñ yen toynoqŭğ'' or simply ''leñoqŭr'', is a [[Verse:Calémere|Calémerian]] language spoken on Márusúturon, belonging to the [[Kenengyry languages|Kenengyry family]] (''kinanğoʻrŭn yen toynoqŭğoʻr''). It is the ethnic language of the Leny people (''leñ hol'' or ''leñoqŭroʻr'') and the only official language in their nation state, Leñ-ṱef, situated on the coast of High and Little Ivulit (known in Leny as ''šağolqŭp yen doʻyor'' "the Gateway Sea" and ''qŭrŭmqey yen doʻyor'' "the Green Sea" respectively) just opposite Qualdomailor, roughly between 29º and 34ºN. It is one of the most divergent Kenengyry languages, the only one in the family not mutually intelligible with any other sister language. As such, it does not have features otherwise common in most languages of the family, such as phonemic vowel length, suffixed definite articles, or consonant gradation.
'''Lenyan''', natively ''leñ yen toynoqŭğ'' or simply ''leñoqŭr'', is a [[Verse:Calémere|Calémerian]] language spoken on Márusúturon, belonging to the [[Kenengyry languages|Kenengyry family]] (''kinanğoʻrŭn yen toynoqŭğoʻr''). It is the ethnic language of the Leñ people (''leñ hol'' or ''leñoqŭroʻr'') and the only official language in their nation state, Leñ-ṱef, situated on the coast of High and Little Ivulit (known in Lenyan as ''šağolqŭp yen doʻyor'' "the Gateway Sea" and ''qŭrŭmqey yen doʻyor'' "the Green Sea" respectively) just opposite Qualdomailor, roughly between 29º and 34ºN. It is one of the most divergent Kenengyry languages, the only one in the family not mutually intelligible with any other sister language. As such, it does not have features otherwise common in most languages of the family, such as phonemic vowel length, suffixed definite articles, or consonant gradation.


It is moderately known in the areas just outside the Leny borders (Ebed-dowa to the north, Džemleštew to the west, and the Chlouvānem Inquisition (dioceses of Līnajoṭa and Yultijaiṭa) to the south), but most Leny are proficient in the area's two main lingue franche, [[Soenjoan]] (in Leny ''soʻyŭnqa yen toynoqŭğ'') used among Kenengyry peoples and more broadly [[Chlouvānem]] (''cenavonŭm yen toynoqŭğ''), the latter of which contributed to a huge amount of terminology to Leny, which is therefore included among the main Imuniguro-Xenic languages. It is spoken by about 12.5 million people, roughly 82% of which in Leñ-ṱef, with a further 12% in the Inquisition and the rest in other countries of the former Kaiṣamā, especially in the Kenengyry world.
It is moderately known in the areas just outside the Leñ borders (Ebed-dowa to the north, Džemleštew to the west, and the Chlouvānem Inquisition (dioceses of Līnajoṭa and Yultijaiṭa) to the south), but most Leny are proficient in the area's two main lingue franche, [[Soenjoan]] (in Leny ''soʻyŭnqa yen toynoqŭğ'') used among Kenengyry peoples and more broadly [[Chlouvānem]] (''cenavonŭm yen toynoqŭğ''), the latter of which contributed to a huge amount of terminology to Lenyan, which is therefore included among the main Imuniguro-Xenic languages. It is spoken by about 12.5 million people, roughly 82% of which in Leñ-ṱef, with a further 12% in the Inquisition and the rest in other countries of the former Kaiṣamā, especially in the Kenengyry world.


==External History==
==External History==
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