Naeng: Difference between revisions

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'''Windermere''' (''fi brits Dămea'' /vɪ brits dəmɛ/; [[Eevo]]: ''a łynøñ Dymee'') is a [[Lakovic]] language belonging to the Naengic branch. It is also known as '''Ashanian''' (e.g. ''ne Qašenin'' in [[Netagin]], specifically for Classical Wdm., ''Xānimiz'' /ʃaːnimis/ in [[Naquian]]) or '''Tergetian''' (e.g. ''døludx Terged'' in [[Tseer]], ''tergetosin'' in [[Clofabosin]]) in various Trician languages. It is more distantly related to [[Tseer]], [[Tsrovesh]], and [[Häskä]].
'''Windermere''' (''fi brits Dămea'' /vɪ brits dəmɛ/ or ''fi brits Neng''; [[Eevo]]: ''a łynøñ Dymee'') is a [[Lakovic]] language belonging to the Naengic branch. It is also known as '''Ashanian''' (e.g. ''ne Qašenin'' in [[Netagin]], specifically for Classical Wdm., ''Xānimiz'' /ʃaːnimis/ in [[Naquian]]) or '''Tergetian''' (e.g. ''døludx Terged'' in [[Tseer]], ''tergetosin'' in [[Clofabosin]]) in various Trician languages. It is more distantly related to [[Tseer]], [[Tsrovesh]], and [[Häskä]].


Modern Windermere is a revived koine/lingua franca/creole arising from various Classical Windermere reading and interpretive traditions, and some scholars believe that Modern Windermere grammar doesn't directly continue that of Classical Windermere. An even more unorthodox view proposed by modern linguist Hăyad Săfărchal is that Modern Windermere shouldn't be thought of as a Lakovic language at all, unlike Tseer and [[Tergetian vernaculars]]; he thinks it's a relexification of various Idavic languages with Classical Windermere words, and he proposes that it be renamed to ''fi brits Biechănd'' or the Bjeheondian language. This hypothesis is challenged by Prăfin of Bălang and other scholars of creoles and sprachbunds in Tricin, who cited various historical intermediate stages of Windermere which appeared in writing (e.g. works by Etsoj Jopah) and in folk songs.
Modern Windermere is a revived koine/lingua franca/creole arising from various Classical Windermere reading and interpretive traditions, and some scholars believe that Modern Windermere grammar doesn't directly continue that of Classical Windermere. An even more unorthodox view proposed by modern linguist Hăyad Săfărchal is that Modern Windermere shouldn't be thought of as a Lakovic language at all, unlike Tseer and [[Tergetian vernaculars]]; he thinks it's a relexification of various Idavic languages with Classical Windermere words, and he proposes that it be renamed to ''fi brits Biechănd'' or the Bjeheondian language. This hypothesis is challenged by Prăfin of Bălang and other scholars of creoles and sprachbunds in Tricin, who cited various historical intermediate stages of Windermere which appeared in writing (e.g. works by Etsoj Jopah) and in folk songs.
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