516
edits
(→Nouns) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:Emona - starejša maketa.jpg|thumb|right|A model of 1st-century Aemona.]] | |||
{{Infobox language | {{Infobox language | ||
|name = Aemonian | |name = Aemonian | ||
|nativename = Linkva Aimonyana | |nativename = Linkva Aimonyana | ||
|pronunciation = [ | |pronunciation = [linkva ˈae̯monja:na] | ||
|creator = [[User:Ioscius|Ioscius]] | |creator = [[User:Ioscius|Ioscius]] | ||
|created = 2018 | |created = 2018 | ||
Line 29: | Line 31: | ||
==Introduction== | ==Introduction== | ||
===Setting=== | ===Setting=== | ||
[[File:The Roman City Walls (7441390582).jpg|thumb|left|Remains of the western wall of Aemona in present-day Ljubljana.]] | |||
Western Rome never fell, but continued well for a thousand years after Augustus and more. The Roman colony ''Colonia Iulia Aemona'', founded on the site of modern-day Ljubljana, served well as one of the empire's main hubs in the region northeast of the Italian peninsula. It absorbed waves of Slavs in the migrations of the 6th to 9th centuries, and over time a mixed language of Latin substrate and heavy Slavic superstrate formed from a late form of Alpine Slavic, the link between Proto-Slavic and the Slovenian found in the Freising Manuscripts. Latin still served as the official and administrative language, but Aemonian was spoken in the streets, even by learned individuals. | Western Rome never fell, but continued well for a thousand years after Augustus and more. The Roman colony ''Colonia Iulia Aemona'', founded on the site of modern-day Ljubljana, served well as one of the empire's main hubs in the region northeast of the Italian peninsula. It absorbed waves of Slavs in the migrations of the 6th to 9th centuries, and over time a mixed language of Latin substrate and heavy Slavic superstrate formed from a late form of Alpine Slavic, the link between Proto-Slavic and the Slovenian found in the Freising Manuscripts. Latin still served as the official and administrative language, but Aemonian was spoken in the streets, even by learned individuals. | ||
Line 40: | Line 44: | ||
==Phonology== | ==Phonology== | ||
[[File:Missale slavonice scripta.jpg|thumb|right|211px|A text in both Latin and OCSlavonic, the two main backgrounds Aemonian mixes.]] | |||
Aemonian's phonology is fairly conservative; though there were many vowels inherited from the Alpine Slavic parent, most have been leveled out to the point where all of the sounds in Aemonian are familiar to those who know virtually any Romance or Slavic language, or even just English. | Aemonian's phonology is fairly conservative; though there were many vowels inherited from the Alpine Slavic parent, most have been leveled out to the point where all of the sounds in Aemonian are familiar to those who know virtually any Romance or Slavic language, or even just English. | ||
edits