628
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elle vit apparaître le matin. elle se tut discrètement.
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Post by Kyron on Sept 15, 2015 15:23:36 GMT 1
All countries in Vradiw! (Basically the same, just phonetically adapted) So if your country has a "special" pronunciation please let me know V has a /b/ sound, like in "bed" (Standard Vradiw doesn't have a /v/ sound) G is always like in "get" Z is like 'th' in "thief", but at the beginning of a word followed by a consonant, it is like 'z' in "zoo" Q is similar to 'j' in "joy" H is like 'ñ' in "niño" in Spanish, or 'gn' in "lasagne/a" in French and Italian B is a strong 'r', like in "rana" in Spanish, or 'rr' in "terra" in Italian J is a strong 'h', like 'j' in "caja" in Spanish, or 'х' in "хорошо" in Russian C is like 'ts' in "cats" X is like 'ch' in "church" W is like 'sh' in "she" Y is like 'u' in French, or "ü" in German Ø is like 'eu' in French, or "ö" in German • Ajroa • Alkyria • Angoctura • Akuia • Asasynia • Atlandia • Yaredival • Vaecnia • Veklium • Serkasia • Danckanksova • Dekoria • Und Veqo / Dipvaly • Delinia • Demasia • Demonika • Dyria • Ekualand • Evamo • Evergryn • Flirckmacto • Fordia • Fokstavia • Freyjurct • Galifrey • Glaray • Urizø Tíeвa • Jariw Ynysj • Aickrect • Qama • (Inoqø Tíeвaj dyi) Qarea • Kervan • Lakadamia • Lanovina • Lendy • Maronesia • Onduria • Orenqina • Pasifika • Pawlanajy • Patriae • Pojunckia • Prunia • Zkandavia • Seneraqa • Vløk Jeivenj • Inoqø Ynysj dyi Ermy • Inoqø Ztedij dyi Eldanc • Vradiazi#VradiFact (Callum ), (Aliya ), (Marco Antonio [QUITE INACTIVE] ), (Aless ), (Wysteria ), ((inactive) ), (@fizzyfrost), (Tobbz ), (~Rethnas~ ), (𝖋𝖑𝖔𝖗𝖎𝖆𝖓 ), (How Bogs How Blue ), (Dimitris ), (gary), (Paulina ), (αndreas ), (Jozef ), (Dylan ), (Maxim ), (nick ), (Eke ), (ClassifiedCat ), (kev ), (Bas ), (ᴛᴏᴍ ᴋʟᴏsᴇʀ ), (RafaSverige), (Mordecai ), (manos ), (✨💃 ), (Grace ), (Nathanaël ), (Matt ), (Rick ), (Luiri ), (Julian ), (alexis9000 ), (Coco (Inactive) ), (𝐴𝑑𝑟𝑖𝑎̀ ), (Christian NO (inactive) ), (Jericho (Super inactive) ), (Anton ), (@douzepointa), (Logan ), (Blandine ), (Daniel ), (soshy), (Llemian ), (Apostolis ), (Sel ), (Kyron )
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Daniel
Retired Administrator
He/any
18,846
55,119
Dell powers
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Post by Daniel on Sept 15, 2015 16:32:40 GMT 1
That was two days before you joined
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628
1,673
elle vit apparaître le matin. elle se tut discrètement.
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Post by Kyron on Sept 15, 2015 16:56:04 GMT 1
That was two days before you joined I asked to join at the end of August
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Post by Deleted on Sept 15, 2015 17:57:52 GMT 1
My country is traditionally called Dumnonia. Deep Valley is the Engju translation used for governmental purposes. This might make translations a bit simpler
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Post by Niklas on Sept 15, 2015 19:18:55 GMT 1
Languages - Seksösteri speaks Seksösterian that's Kazakh - Züüdgazar speaks Züüdgazari that's Mongolian - Hohonu speaks Hohonu-Reo that's Maori - Ekruvora speaks Ekruvoric Dyrian, because Ekruvorians have their roots in Dyria that's Icelandic, just like Dyrian - Oncartref speaks Cartrefiaith Thats Welsh I know welsh excists already, but the country where it's spoken is just too far away to make a connection - Luminärviä speaks Fennju Luminärviainen (no explanation needed I think, it's a dialect) - Anbportach speaks South Eastern Irsan 'cause they have their roots in Dyria too..
got to inform about that country... - Yeranery speaks Yeraneryan that's Armenian
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Post by Deleted on Sept 15, 2015 19:50:36 GMT 1
- Oncartref speaks Cartrefiaith Thats Welsh I know welsh exists already, but the country where it's spoken is just too far away to make a connection Distance doesn't make lingual connections impossible. In real life, Welsh is spoken in a region of Argentina
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Post by Deleted on Sept 15, 2015 20:15:17 GMT 1
I was meaning to add Inoosian - a mixture of Hindi and Punjabi spoken my a minority ethnic group in my country
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la martiza c'est ma rivière
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Post by alex(a)bg on Sept 22, 2015 12:15:06 GMT 1
The official language in Ruyjin is Engju (English)
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Post by Deleted on Oct 5, 2015 16:47:46 GMT 1
As I had promised once, I´ll try to post some kind of a description of the Áredian language, even though I doubt someone will find it anyhow interesting Alphabet and orthography: The letter | Pronunciation | Like in (Engju, unless otherwise noted) | Notes | A | [ a ] | Allemanju Katze | | Á | [ja] | Allem. ja | | Â | [æ] | cat | Observed only in Énárian | B | [ b ] | Bob | | C | [t͡s]
| cats | Rare; changes into [tʃ] after accented vowels | D | [d] | Dad | Changes into [dz] after accented vowels | E | [e] | Frenju aller | | É | [je] | Fr. mienne | | Ĕ | [ə] | taken | Observed only in Énárian; pronounced extremely short | F | [f] | fix | | G | [g] | get | | H | [h] | hat | | I | [ɪ] | kid | | Í | [i:] | seen | | J | [ʒ] | genre | | K | [k] | cat | | L | [l] | lamp | Changes into [ʎ] (like in Espaneole llamo) after accented vowels in the quick colloquial speech | M | [m] | Sam | | N | [n] | no | | O | [o] | All. oder (without the glottal stop though) | | Ó | [jo] | your | | P | [ p ] | pit | | R | [r] | Esp. perro | | S | [ s ] | sad | Changes into [ʃ] or [tʃ] after accented vowels | T | [t] | text | Changes into [t͡s] after accented vowels | U | [ u ] | push | | Ú | [ju] | you | | V | [v] | vault | | Y | [y] | Fr. une | Rare, mostly in placenames | Ý | [jy] | music (though much more tense) | Observed only in two placenames | Z | [z] | zero | Changes into [ʒ] after accented vowels |
The orthography of the Áredian language is mostly phonemic, the only incovenience for the non-native speakers is the not very predictable change of into [ʃ] or [tʃ] after accented vowels. In the latter case the spelling convention is to write "c" instead of "s" in this case, e.g.: the dative of iners (law) is inercí [in'ertʃi:] , while the dative for bris (gold) is brisín ['briʃi:n]. There are several rules which cover the majority of cases but still some exceptions have to be memorized by heart. Nouns and their morphology:
All the nouns in Áredian belong to one of three genders. Masculine nouns end in -o or have no ending at all in their nominal form, feminine nouns end in -a, -e or -é and neuter nouns end in -i. The trend is that neuter gender is gradually disappearing from the language: there's no neuter form for adjectives (if neuter nouns are modified by an adjective, they take the masculine form), the corresponding personal pronoun ó is shifting its meaning towards "common gender" (used when the gender or the sex of the person is not important), many neuter nouns have acquired an alternative way of declension (mostly the masculine one). Áredian nouns are heavily declined for case. The grammarians usually split all the forms into the basic cases (whose endings may differ depending on the type of declension) and the additional cases (which use the same suffixes for all the nouns). Though this classification is largely subjective, we will stick to it in order to give the quick overview of the case forms in Áredian. The basic cases are as follows: Engju name | Áredian name | Meaning | Example | Translation | Nominative | Rindai forma | subject of an intransitive verbb (e.g. to go, to walk, to sleep etc.), object of several existential verbs (e.g. to be, to become, to remain) | bur | a house | Subjective | Subékti forma | subject of a transitive verb (e.g. to see smth, to know smth etc.) | i buren | a house (does something) | Accusative | Obékti forma | direct object | bure | (something does) the house | Dative | Úrtesobékti forma | indirect object | burín | to the house | Locative | Gali forma | location | burens | in the house | Instrumental | Praniái forma | means or way of the action | burem | by means of the house, with the help of the house | Partitive | Ciferi forma | used after the numbers and quantifiers (like "a cup of...", "a jar of...") | burene | (a portion) of the house | Possessive | Fáimeri forma | possession (mostly direct, like "father's car") | buri | house's, of the house |
In order to avoid ambiguity it should be noted that, unlike in Kerwanese, the partitive case is never used as an object of the verb to express unfinished actions. Below are some more examples of different declension paradigms of Áredian nouns:
| masc. "silent" declension gal - place, location | masc. -en declension fév - boy | masc. -o declension álo - time | masc. irregular hans - man | fem. -e declension ame - mother | fem. -a declension kiha - night | fem. -é declension naté - folk, nation | neut. neuter declension mali - mountain | Nom. | gal | fév | álo | hans | ame | kiha | naté | mali | Subj. | i gal | i féven | i álos | i han | e ama | e kihiá | e natá | i mali | Acc. | gale | féve | ále | henne | ame | kihe | nate | male | Dat. | galí | févín | álón | héní | amuí | kihua | natú | malí | Loc. | galos | févens | álons | hanos | amas | kihas | natés | malis | Ins. | galom | févem | álom | hanom | amam* | kiham | natém | malim | Part. | galei | févene | álois | henis | amai | kihiái | natái | malí | Poss. | gali | févi | áli | héni | amei | kihei | natéi | malí |
* - also amma in colloquial speech It is necessary to mention that the endings are slightly different in the more conservative Énárian dialect (e.g. the silent declension preserves ě in the subjective case - nom. gal, subj. ei galě, acc. gale - or there's no homonymy between the nominative and accusative cases of the feminine -e declension - nom. ama, subj. ea amea, acc. ame) The additional cases are really numerous, around 15-20 depending on who's counting. For the quick overview we'll take the bunch of locative cases which are formed from the locative forms of the nouns + case suffix. For example: | Meaning | Suffix | masc. val - land | fem. lokaté - location | neut. mali - mountain | Locative | in | various | valens | lokatés | malis | Illative | into | Loc. + -t | valenst | lokatést | malist | Elative | out of | Loc. + -aih | valensaih | lokatésaih | malisaih | Ablative | (moving) away from | Loc. + -úrt | valensúrt | lokatésúrt | malisúrt | Adessive | on | Loc. + -inna | valensinna | lokatésinna | malisinna | Proximative | near, at | Loc. + -taip | valenstaip | lokatéstaip | malistaip | Distantive | (being) away from | Loc. + -úr | valensúr | lokatésúr | malisúr |
Most of the other cases are formed with the help of the accusative and dative forms. Despite the complex case system, the formation of the plural is really simple in the standard Áredian. All you have to do is to insert the plural suffix -ed- between the stem of the noun and the case ending. Thus for example, the nouns gal and álo decline as follows in the plural: | gal | álo | Nom. | galed | áledo | Subj. | i galed | í áledos | Acc. | galede | álede | Dat. | galedí | áledón | Loc. | galedos | áledons | Ins. | galedom | áledom | Part. | galedei | áledois | Poss. | galedi | áledi | Ill. | galedost | áledonst | Prox. | galedostaip | áledonstaip |
The conservative Énárian dialect however preserves some of the distinct plural endings, for example, -este for accusative plural and -eksis for dative plural. The last thing to mention in this quick overview of the Áredian nominal morphology is the subjective marker. It is actually the vestige of the definite article which could be declined for all the basic cases (and it still does perform this function in the Énárian dialect), however nowadays it is used in order to define the subject of the sentence. It is still declined for two cases: | masc./neut.
| fem. | Subj. | i | e | Ins. | ém | ám |
The instrumental subjective marker is used in the structure which serves as the substitute for the non-existent passive voice in the Áredian.
In the next series (if I actually find some courage for two more hours of typing and struggling with tables ) - verbs and some basic vocabulary )
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