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==Dialects==
==Dialects==
===Standard dialect===
<small>''Main article: [[Moshurian dialects]]''</small>
The standard dialect of Moshurian is, according to the Ministry of Linguistic Regulation(MLR), officially the Taráhus dialect spoken in the capital, although Tárahus is so large that several districts have developed their own dialects, so it is still unclear on which is considered the standard within the family of Taráhus dialects.
====Inner Taráhus dialect====
The Inner Taráhus dialect is generally considered by Moshurian linguistics to be what the MLR constitution means in the line: <blockquote>"''[...] The dialect '''spoken around the capitol and the [MLR]''' shall be considered the dialect to be used for the transmission of necessary information to Moshurian citizens. For non-Moshurian areas of the Empire, the standard [dialect]<ref>The original constitution uses the word "edition"(''[[Contionary:kuchbarà|kuchbarà]]'') to refer to standard dialects of minority languages, which is kind of confusing.</ref> of the most prominent non-Moshurian language shall be used to convey said information.''"</blockquote>
However, this quote can be considered quite vague, as the MLR and the wider capitol has changed location many times in Taráhus. One year, the MLR headquarters was located in the district of Oźmaneli, where a borderline unintelligible dialect of Moshurian is spoken, and, for that year, the bizarre Oźmaneli dialect was considered the standard, causing great confusion to non-Oźmanelis.
 
====Oźmaneli dialect====
The Oźmaneli dialect is a dialect spoken in the inner city district of Oźmaneli. It has garnered much attention from linguists, as its pronunciation is widely different from typical pronunciation.
 
Additionally, it is the only dialect to utilise the [[w:Zero copula|zero copula]], an effect where the verb "to be" is not used in a statement, e.g. instead of "I am tired" it would be "I tired".
=====Phonetic differences=====
In general, the pattern seems to be that voiceless consonants tend to get voiced, but this is not always the case.
* /ŋ/ is pronounced [ɳ] or [ɟ]<ref>Why /ŋ/ is pronounced [ɟ] is one of the greatest mysteries of Moshurian.</ref>
* /x/ is pronounced [ɣ]
* /ð/ is pronounced [θ]<ref>The pronunciation of /ð/ as [θ] is a consistent pattern among most non-standard dialects of Moshurian, although some Oźmanelis pronounced /ð/ as [ɕ].</ref>
* /b/ is sometimes pronounced [ʙ] before a /ɽ/.
* Speaking of /ɽ/, it is pronounced as a geminated [ll]
 
=====Morphological differences=====
* ''[[Contionary:mosok|mosok]]'' ⇒ Oźmaneli ''mudźuk''.
* ''[[Contionary:pusadi|pusadi]]'' ⇒ Oźmaneli ''bsédodifh''.
* ''[[Contionary:uthilikh|uthilikh]]'' ⇒ Oźmaneli ''utuɟul''.
* ''[[Contionary:surus|surus]]/[[Contionary:zazuŋ|zazuŋ]]'' ⇒ Oźmaneli ''şild/soéş''.
=====Oźmaneli rhyming slang=====
Very similar to [[w:Rhyming slang|Cockney rhyming slang]] in London, Oźmaneli has its own rhyming slang, that often leaves many non-Oźmanelis ''stringed''(confused).
* ''abaza''(football) rhymes with ''dzul iz upaza''(colour and shape) → ''dzul''
* ''zebatalomh''(confuse) → ''usuŋtua sibatal''(stringed instrument) → ''usuŋtua''
 
===Oalan dialect===
The Oalan dialect is the specific dialect of Moshurian spoken in the city of Oalan and its surrounding suburbs. Although not as dissimilar from the standard as the Oźmaneli dialect, and having relatively few morphological differences, phonologically it differs quite a bit, and is thus often considered by those from Taráhus as an "uneducated" and "rural" dialect. This interpretation is considered quite offensive by Oalanians, who in return see the Taráhusians as "egotistic bourgeois moral absolutists", or just "rich assholes" for short. Perhaps not so coincidentally, the local branch of the Moshurian Socialist Party often use rich Taráhusians as scapegoats in economic troubles, and are thus quite popular in the region.
====Phonological differences====
* Glottal or velar fricatives(/h/ or /x/) surrounded by vowels are either not pronounced or non-syllabic.
** Middle Moshurian ''ukhalan''<ref>Often mentioned as a possible etymology for the city of Oalan.</ref> → (possibly) Oalan
* Initial /u/ is pronounced [o] or [ɔ].
** ''uthilikh'' /ˈuð.ilix/ → [ˈoθ.ilih]
* Final /x/ is pronounced [h] or not at all
** ''semikh'' → [semih~semy]
* Final unrounded vowels are rounded.
** ''asti'' /asti/ → [asty]
* Voiced fricatives at the beginning of syllables, unless velar or glottal and the next phone is a vowel, are unvoiced.
** ''eźir'' /ɛˈʒiɽ/ → [ɛˈʃiɽ]
* Phonemic /ɪ/ can change in multiple ways(though this often depends on region):
** It can merge into /i/, meaning there is no phonological distinction between words like ''poliyar'' [polijaɽ] "miraculous" and ''polëyar'' [polɪjaɽ] "machine"
*** ''polëyar'' [polɪjaɽ] → [polijaɽ]
*** ''nër'' [nɪɽ] → [niɽ]
** It can be realised as [ɨ](mostly rural realisation)
*** ''lëŋomh'' [lɪŋom] → [lɨŋom]
 
===Loïha dialect===
The Loïha dialect is the dialect of Moshurian speakers who reside in the Golden Plain. Loïha is possibly the most distinct but still intelligible dialect of Moshurian. This is because there are very few morphological differences, but quite large sound changes.
 
A major feature of Loïha vernacular that distinguishes it from the standard is that the phonemes /e/ and /i/ are pronounced the same, usually either one or the other. In IPA this is often written as [e~i].
 
The Loïha dialect is also often split into two groups of dialects: Eastern and Western Loïha. Eastern tends to conform more with the standard, and Western tends to diverge more.
====Sound changes====
* From /ð/ → [θ](Western) or [ð](Eastern)
* From /x/ → [ʁ](Western) or [χ](Eastern)
* In diphthong C̥V → /ʔV/.
* /e/ and /i/ merge into [e~i]. Western speakers lean towards [i] more often than [e], while Eastern speakers do the opposite.
 
===Odezyë dialect===
The Odezyë dialect is phonetically not very different from standard Moshurian, but it does have a bizarre mannerism that cannot be found in any other dialect- that being the suffix ''-áktu''. It is placed directly after any sort of proper noun, including names. The origin of this is heavily debated- although the most prominent theory claims that it may come from the Aquq genitive suffix ''-et’ḛ''.
 
===Far East dialect===
The entire existence of the Far East Moshurians(''Dmuriékh''; <small>Moshurian:</small> [[IPA for Moshurian|<nowiki>[dˈmuɽi̯ˌex]</nowiki>]]) is shrouded in mystery, but they seem to speak a certain dialect of Moshurian that only slightly varies from the standard Taráhus dialect.
====Phonological differences====
* /u/ → [ʊ] or [ɯ] in some cases
* [VN]<ref>Vowel before nasal consonant. Quite common in the Eastern subgroup of dialects.</ref> → [Ṽ].
 
===Sépenzg dialect===
Morphologically speaking, the Sépenzg dialect does not differ much from other Moshurian dialects, though phonologically, there is one major difference: [[Moshurian#Roōka's law|Roōka's law]] did not occur in the dialect, and to this day the /ɸ/ allophone is still pronounced [ʃ].
 
The Sépenzg dialect is an example of "regressive phonology" in [[Yeldhic languages]], where a register or dialect of a language is isolated from a major sound change or sound changes. There is also "regressive morphology", where a dialect does not experience morphological change that other dialects did. Though this is significantly rarer in Yeldhic languages, it can be found in some [[Misunic languages]], and is often what leads to the diversion of languages.


==Example texts==
==Example texts==
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