Hendalarskisch: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 16:42, 13 March 2022

Hendalarskisch
Gotet nyelv (Lagyar), Kolel can'Ulstor (Nünsyi)
Regionnorthwestern Levantia
Ethnicitypredominantly Hendalarskaren, Lagyar, Nunsyak
Native speakers
c.80,000,000 (2021)
Occidental
  • Gothic
    • Central Gothic
      • Hendalarskisch
Early form
Old Central Gothic
Official status
Official language in
 Hendalarsk
Language codes
ISO 639-3
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Hendalarskisch (Lagyar: Gotet nyelv, Nünsyi: Kolel can'Ulstor) is the primary official and most widely-spoken language in Hendalarsk, a country in northwestern Levantia. The predominant Central Gothic language, Hendalarskisch forms part of the Gothic subfamily and by extension the wider Occidental superfamily.[1] Hendalarskisch is either the second- or third-most widely-spoken Gothic language by number of native speakers, behind only Junglish and possibly Yonderian East Gothic, and enjoys widespread influence across the Vandarch littoral via its creole, the Pentapolitan Argot.

The political history of Hendalarsk means that there are many strikingly distinct dialects of Hendalarskisch across the country, most of which have survived 19th-century efforts at standardisation intact; some scholars[2] have even argued that these dialects are themselves all closely-related languages, with "Standard Hendalarskisch" simply the most prestigious language of the Central Gothic cluster. Most Hendalarskara scholars nevertheless favour a "dialect continuum" interpretation of Hendalarskisch.

German is an inflected language, with four cases for nouns, pronouns, and adjectives (nominative, accusative, genitive, dative); three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter); and two numbers (singular, plural). It has strong and weak verbs. The majority of its vocabulary derives from the Gothic branch of Occidental, although it has also seen substantial influence from non-Occidental languages such as Lagyar and Nünsyi - a number of proposals argue that Proto-Nünsyi forms a substrate within Hendalarskisch[3] - and latterly other non-Gothic Occidental languages, such as Burgoignesc and Fhasen.

Notes

  1. A minority of Hendalarskara linguists insist that the Gothic family is its own language family, independent of all other branches of Occidental (e.g. Vorstoll, 2003), although as of the 2020s this proposal is widely discredited.
  2. Scholz, Ulla, 'Mundarten: Sprachen ohne Waffen?', Herne: eine hendalarskische Sprachzeitschrift 104:1 (1976), pp. 143-97.
  3. e.g. Gottorp, Ludwig-Adam, 'Urnünsyi: Der hendalarskische Unterschied', Herne: eine hendalarskische Sprachzeitschrift 62:3 (1934), pp. 526-81.