Arkvera: Difference between revisions

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Nohæric is the literary register of Kiravic used by the state government and in newspapers, and public schools students are taught to read and write Kiravic according to Nohæric conventions. [A-Kiryanvi/B-Kiryanvi] is the spoken dialect of Kiravic most common in the central lowlands and valleys, while Highland dialects predominante in the eastern and southern parts of the state. The speech patterns of the state’s significant Féinem population, as well as Gaels, Ĥeldican Coscivians, and many Highlanders when speaking Kiravic (whether as a first or second language) can be classified as part of the Fenian Kiravic dialect continuüm, reflecting considerable influence from Gaelic.
Nohæric is the literary register of Kiravic used by the state government and in newspapers, and public schools students are taught to read and write Kiravic according to Nohæric conventions. [A-Kiryanvi/B-Kiryanvi] is the spoken dialect of Kiravic most common in the central lowlands and valleys, while Highland dialects predominante in the eastern and southern parts of the state. The speech patterns of the state’s significant Féinem population, as well as Gaels, Ĥeldican Coscivians, and many Highlanders when speaking Kiravic (whether as a first or second language) can be classified as part of the Fenian Kiravic dialect continuüm, reflecting considerable influence from Gaelic.
[[File:Lakeshore West GO Train Westbound.jpg|thumb|A commuter train outside Ivotren]]
[[File:Lakeshore West GO Train Westbound.jpg|thumb|A commuter train outside Ivotren]]
Despite its relative poverty, Arkvera has nonetheless been a major contributor to Kiravian cultural and intellectual life. Many Insular Apostolic and Coscivian Orthodox monasteries were established in Arkvera as early as the 20550s, which fostered the production of much ecclesiastical music and art, as well as a prodigious literary output in both High Coscivian and Gaelic on topics as diverse as Christian theology, Shaftonist philosophy, linguistics, botany, brewing, and the cultures of local Aboriginal tribes.  
Despite its relative poverty, Arkvera has nonetheless been a major contributor to Kiravian cultural and intellectual life. Many Insular Apostolic and Coscivian Orthodox monasteries were established in Arkvera as early as the 20550s, which fostered the production of much ecclesiastical music and art, as well as a prodigious literary output in both High Coscivian and Gaelic on topics as diverse as Christian theology, Shaftonist philosophy, linguistics, botany, brewing, and the cultures of local Urom tribes.  


The renowned Kiravian author Íoan Érolin, known for his travelogues which inspired the Kiravian romantic and neo-romantic literary movements, was born and raised in Xarxanden, where he began his journalistic career and composed some of his early works. Although he spent most of his career travelling and had been living in Kérvoak, Ilánova at the time of his death, Érolin’s works have been claimed as part of Arkveran literature, and his remains were transferred from a Kérvoak ossuary to the State Stanoral Cemetery in Xarxanden in 21192. County Érolin in far southern Arkvera is named in his honour (although biographers of Érolin believe that he may have never actually visited that part of the state).
The renowned Kiravian author Íoan Érolin, known for his travelogues which inspired the Kiravian romantic and neo-romantic literary movements, was born and raised in Xarxanden, where he began his journalistic career and composed some of his early works. Although he spent most of his career travelling and had been living in Kérvoak, Ilánova at the time of his death, Érolin’s works have been claimed as part of Arkveran literature, and his remains were transferred from a Kérvoak ossuary to the State Stanoral Cemetery in Xarxanden in 21192. County Érolin in far southern Arkvera is named in his honour (although biographers of Érolin believe that he may have never actually visited that part of the state).