Some Trician conlang: Difference between revisions

From Linguifex
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''{{SUBPAGENAME}}''' ([[Togarmite/Old|Old Togarmite]] /tʰa:'hi:datʰ ha'wu:tʰan/ 'Oneness of Being'; one may abbreviate it ''ΘH'' or ''ThH'') is a monotheistic Abrahamic religion based on Old Togarmite religious writings. {{SUBPAGENAME}} is dominant in Eastern Europe and Siberia, thus Old Togarmite is a liturgical language in that area. In the Togarmite homeland, however, it was replaced by other religions.
'''{{SUBPAGENAME}}''' ([[Togarmite/Old|Old Togarmite]] /tʰa:'hi:datʰ ha'wu:tʰan/ 'Oneness of Being'; one may abbreviate it ''ΘH'' or ''ThH'') is a monotheistic Abrahamic religion based on the writings of Hellenistic Greek philosopher Antiochos Euergetes. {{SUBPAGENAME}} is dominant all over Lõis's Near East, as well as in Eastern Europe, Siberia and India. The liturgical languages used depend on region; Eastern Europe and Siberia use Old Togarmite, the Near East uses Greek and vernacular languages; and India uses [some IE language].


It's somewhere between Sufism and Advaita Vedanta: it holds that all the different gods mankind worships are manifestations of one ultimate God. However, to understand the one true God at a deeper level one must understand one's true self, in order to discern what purpose one was created by God for. (?)
It's somewhere between Sufism and Advaita Vedanta: it holds that all the different gods mankind worships are manifestations of one ultimate God. However, to understand the one true God at a deeper level one must understand one's true self, in order to discern what purpose one was created by God for. (?)

Revision as of 09:08, 4 September 2019

Some Trician conlang (Old Togarmite /tʰa:'hi:datʰ ha'wu:tʰan/ 'Oneness of Being'; one may abbreviate it ΘH or ThH) is a monotheistic Abrahamic religion based on the writings of Hellenistic Greek philosopher Antiochos Euergetes. Some Trician conlang is dominant all over Lõis's Near East, as well as in Eastern Europe, Siberia and India. The liturgical languages used depend on region; Eastern Europe and Siberia use Old Togarmite, the Near East uses Greek and vernacular languages; and India uses [some IE language].

It's somewhere between Sufism and Advaita Vedanta: it holds that all the different gods mankind worships are manifestations of one ultimate God. However, to understand the one true God at a deeper level one must understand one's true self, in order to discern what purpose one was created by God for. (?)