Difference between revisions of "Cantuath language"
(page redone) |
m (Text replacement - "Iberic Script" to "Iberic script") |
||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
| dia2 = • Western Eusazy<br />• Eastern Eusazy | | dia2 = • Western Eusazy<br />• Eastern Eusazy | ||
| dia3 = Hapat Eusazy | | dia3 = Hapat Eusazy | ||
− | | script = [[Iberic | + | | script = [[Iberic script|Iberic]] |
| nation = {{flag|Paleocacher}}<br />{{flag|Hapatmitas}} | | nation = {{flag|Paleocacher}}<br />{{flag|Hapatmitas}} | ||
| agency = | | agency = |
Revision as of 18:40, 21 August 2023
Eusazy | |
---|---|
Ethnicity | Paleocacherians, Hapats |
Native speakers | ~246 million (2023) |
Early form | |
Dialects |
|
Iberic | |
Official status | |
Official language in | Paleocacher Hapatmitas |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Eusazy is the official and national language of Paleocacher and Hapatmitas. A member of the Keltik language family, Eusazy's base origins are retraced back to Ayreoshubic Latin. However, when the first humans crossed over to Ostlandet from Ecros 50,000 years ago, the language evolved to become distinct from the other languages on the continent. There are currently about 246 million native Eusazy speakers in both Paleocacher and Hapatmitas. Eusazy is also an official language in the Ostlandet Union.
In the language, there are currently three dialects - Western and Eastern Paleocacherian and Hapat (also called Southern). Western and Eastern Paleocacherian originates from the original split of the country's respective regions, while the Southern dialect was developed from the 13th-century Paleocacherian-Hapat emigrants. The Eusazy alphabet has two variants, respectively consisting of eighteen and twenty-four letters. While it is only widely spoken in Paleocacher and Hapatmitas, Eusazy also serves as a secondary language in a few of Paleocacher's main trading partners but not as a primary language.