Bérasar: Difference between revisions

4 bytes removed ,  19 January 2022
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Text replacement - "Kuhlfrosian" to "Fiannrian"
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>Burgundines with their various layers of history
>Burgundines with their various layers of history


>Urceans, Kuhlfrosians, and Fanerian
>Urceans, Fiannrians, and Fanerian


===Religion===
===Religion===
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The everyday language of Béyasar is ''Bāsahrona'', a dialect of [[Kiravic Coscivian]] that forms the core of the Fariva Kiravic dialect spoken in the surrounding state. Written Kiravic usage in the Béyasar metropolitan area tends to follow the "Edskover Consensus", a group of conventions and style guides developed at Farivan universities and teaching colleges in the early decades following the Republican Revolution, and thus has noticeable differences from written Kiravic in other parts of the country that are more influenced by Valēkan or Southern conventions.
The everyday language of Béyasar is ''Bāsahrona'', a dialect of [[Kiravic Coscivian]] that forms the core of the Fariva Kiravic dialect spoken in the surrounding state. Written Kiravic usage in the Béyasar metropolitan area tends to follow the "Edskover Consensus", a group of conventions and style guides developed at Farivan universities and teaching colleges in the early decades following the Republican Revolution, and thus has noticeable differences from written Kiravic in other parts of the country that are more influenced by Valēkan or Southern conventions.


32% of Béyasar residents reported Kiravic as their only mother tongue, while an additional 26% report themselves as natively multilingual in Kiravic and one or more other languages. The most common native language after Kiravic is Gaelic (mostly Kuhlfrosian-Kiravians, native Kiravian Gaels, and [[Féinem]]), followed by Kostiatem Coscivian, Lebhan, Cālatem Coscivian, and Latin.  Most educated Coscivian residents of Béyasar are Kiravic-speaking, literate in High Coscivian, and conversational in either Lebhan, Levantine Latin, or both.
32% of Béyasar residents reported Kiravic as their only mother tongue, while an additional 26% report themselves as natively multilingual in Kiravic and one or more other languages. The most common native language after Kiravic is Gaelic (mostly Fiannrian-Kiravians, native Kiravian Gaels, and [[Féinem]]), followed by Kostiatem Coscivian, Lebhan, Cālatem Coscivian, and Latin.  Most educated Coscivian residents of Béyasar are Kiravic-speaking, literate in High Coscivian, and conversational in either Lebhan, Levantine Latin, or both.


Use of Levantine languages in commercial and public service settings is very common in Béyasar. Most directional signage in core areas of the city is printed in both Kiravic and Latin, and most police officers have at least a rudimentary understanding of Latin and/or Lebhan. Many downtown restaurants have bi- or trilingual menus, and electoral ballots in the city are available in Gaelic, Latin, Lebhan, Canaesh, Rexan, and Pretannic. Beginning in 21208, emergency broadcasts in the Béyasar metro area will include information in Urcean English and Fanerian Gothic.
Use of Levantine languages in commercial and public service settings is very common in Béyasar. Most directional signage in core areas of the city is printed in both Kiravic and Latin, and most police officers have at least a rudimentary understanding of Latin and/or Lebhan. Many downtown restaurants have bi- or trilingual menus, and electoral ballots in the city are available in Gaelic, Latin, Lebhan, Canaesh, Rexan, and Pretannic. Beginning in 21208, emergency broadcasts in the Béyasar metro area will include information in Urcean English and Fanerian Gothic.