Ndongan: Difference between revisions

88 bytes removed ,  26 August 2021
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Updated infobox
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| name = Ndongan
| name = Ndongan
| nativename = {{dict|Кѣязик Ндоҥске|language=Ndongan}}
| nativename = {{dict|Кѣязик Ндоҥске|language=Ndongan}}
| pronunciation = /{{IPA|kʲɘjɶzik ⁿdɔŋskʲe}}/
| pronunciation = kʲɘjɶzik ⁿdɔŋskʲe
| familycolor = indo-european
| familycolor = indo-european
| fam1 = [[:w:Proto-Indo-European language|Indo-European]]
| fam2 = [[:w:Centum and satem languages|Satem]]
| fam2 = [[:w:Centum and satem languages|Satem]]
| fam3 = [[:w:Balto-Slavic languages|Balto-Slavic]]
| fam3 = [[:w:Balto-Slavic languages|Balto-Slavic]]
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|fam7=[[:w:Afro-Russian|Afro-Russian]]
|fam7=[[:w:Afro-Russian|Afro-Russian]]
| creator = [[User:Учхљёная|Elliott Wheeler]]
| creator = [[User:Учхљёная|Elliott Wheeler]]
| script = Cyrillic
| script = Cyrl
| setting = [[Verse:L′ywai!]]
| setting = [[Verse:L′ywai!|L′ywai!]]
| nation = [[Verse:L′ywai!/Ndonga|Ndonga]] ([[:w:Angola|Angola]]), [[Verse:L′ywai!/Chornarus|Chornarus]] ([[:w:Namibia|Namibia]]), [[Verse:L′ywai!/Mozambique|Mozambique]]
| nation = [[Verse:L′ywai!/Ndonga|Ndonga]] ([[:w:Angola|Angola]]), [[Verse:L′ywai!/Chornarus|Chornarus]] ([[:w:Namibia|Namibia]]), [[Verse:L′ywai!/Mozambique|Mozambique]]
| region = (Former) [[Verse:L′ywai!/Russian Africa|Russian Africa]], [[:w:Southern Africa|Southern Africa]]
| region = (Former) [[Verse:L′ywai!/Russian Africa|Russian Africa]], [[:w:Southern Africa|Southern Africa]]
| iso3 = (qrq)
| clcr = qrq
| image =
| imagecaption =
| speakers = 35.6 million
| speakers = 35.6 million
| date = 12016
| date = 12016
| ethnicity = Ndongans, [[Verse:L′ywai!/Russian Africa#African-Russians|African-Russians]]
| ethnicity = Ndongans, [[Verse:L′ywai!/Russian Africa#African-Russians|African-Russians]]
}}
}}
'''Ndongan''' (Кѣязик Ндоҥске, tr. {{#invoke:Transliterator|qrqcyrl|Кѣязик Ндоҥске}}), in the [[Verse:L′ywai!|universe of the play ''L′ywai! (Лѣвай!)'']] by Elliott Wheeler, is an East Slavic creole, which evolved from the [[:w:History of the Russian language#Empire (18th-19th centuries)|Imperial Russian language]] and its pidgin form in Southern Africa via heavy influence from the [[:w:Kikongo language|Kikongo]] and [[:w:Kimbundu language|Kimbundu language]]s. Being an official language in [[Verse:L′ywai!/Ndonga|Ndonga]], [[Verse:L′ywai!/Chornarus|Chornarus]], and [[Verse:L′ywai!/Mozambique|Mozambique]], the language is and continues to be of particular importance to the peoples of former [[Verse:L′ywai!/Russian Africa|Russian Africa]], acting mainly as a lingua-franca analogous to Afrikaans, and functioned as a semi-code talk of the Red Army and other revolutionary groups during the Civil war.
'''Ndongan''' (''Кѣязик Ндоҥске'', tr. {{#invoke:Transliterator|qrqcyrl|Кѣязик Ндоҥске}}), in the [[Verse:L′ywai!|universe of the play ''L′ywai! (Лѣвай!)'']] by Elliott Wheeler, is an East Slavic creole, which evolved from the [[:w:History of the Russian language#Empire (18th-19th centuries)|Imperial Russian language]] and its pidgin form in Southern Africa via heavy influence from the [[:w:Kikongo language|Kikongo]] and [[:w:Kimbundu language|Kimbundu language]]s. Being an official language in [[Verse:L′ywai!/Ndonga|Ndonga]], [[Verse:L′ywai!/Chornarus|Chornarus]], and [[Verse:L′ywai!/Mozambique|Mozambique]], the language is and continues to be of particular importance to the peoples of former [[Verse:L′ywai!/Russian Africa|Russian Africa]], acting mainly as a lingua-franca analogous to Afrikaans, and functioned as a semi-code talk of the Red Army and other revolutionary groups during the Civil war.


As of [[:w:2016|the year 12016]], the language has 35.6 million speakers (native & non-native) and counting, making it one of the largest creole languages in the word. The majority of the speakers of the language are of Ndongan or [[Verse:L′ywai!/Russian Africa#African-Russians|African-Russian]] ethnicity distributed widely across southern Africa, with the number of African-Russians who have adopted the language (over their native Russian) has increased significantly in recent years after the [[:w:Dissolution of the Soviet Union|dissolution of the Soviet Union]] and subsequent de-Russification movement in response to the growth of [[:w:Reactionary|reactionary politics]] in Russia.
As of [[:w:2016|the year 12016]], the language has 35.6 million speakers (native & non-native) and counting, making it one of the largest creole languages in the word. The majority of the speakers of the language are of Ndongan or [[Verse:L′ywai!/Russian Africa#African-Russians|African-Russian]] ethnicity distributed widely across southern Africa, with the number of African-Russians who have adopted the language (over their native Russian) has increased significantly in recent years after the [[:w:Dissolution of the Soviet Union|dissolution of the Soviet Union]] and subsequent de-Russification movement in response to the growth of [[:w:Reactionary|reactionary politics]] in Russia.