Kiravic Coscivian: Difference between revisions

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Tag: 2017 source edit
Tag: 2017 source edit
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There are three main literary registers of Kiravic. While all are mutually intelligible, they differ substantially in vocabulary, syntax, lexico-morphological rules, orthography, and style.
There are three main literary registers of Kiravic. While all are mutually intelligible, they differ substantially in vocabulary, syntax, lexico-morphological rules, orthography, and style.


*'''Literary Kiravic''' or '''Nohæric''' is the register of Kiravic that developed from the conventions established by the earliest schools of rhetoric to begin teaching rhetoric in Kiravic in addition to Iatic during the Confederate Republics period. Today, Nohæric remains the register of prestige, and is used in most literature, periodicals with a republican-class, upper-class, or professional audience, and polished correspondence. In states in core Kiravic-speaking areas of Great Kirav, Nohæric is usually the register taught in schools, while in peripheral Kiravic-speaking and non-Kiravic speaking areas Standard Kiravic is generally preferred in pedagogy.
*'''Literary Kiravic''' or '''Nohæric''' is the register of Kiravic that developed from the conventions established by the earliest schools of rhetoric to begin teaching rhetoric in Kiravic in addition to Iatic during the Confederate Republics period. Today, Nohæric remains the register of prestige, and is used in most long-form prose literature, newspapers, most middle-to-high-brow magazines, and polished correspondence. In states the core Kiravic-speaking areas of Great Kirav, Nohæric is usually the register taught in schools, while in areas where other regional languages predominate Standard Kiravic is generally preferred in pedagogy.
   
   
*'''Standard Kiravic''' (Kiravic: ''Oskandikiravirona''), also known as ''tèlúverþarona'' ("schoolbook language") is the register of Kiravic that developed during the mid-20900s when mass immigration from Old Coscivia led to Kiravic being used primarily as a vehicle for interethnic communication. The name of the register comes from the ''Verþa Danneoskandiskya'' ("Book of Lesson Standards"), a set of guidelines for primary-school Kiravic instruction produced by a consortium of educators and grammarians at the request of the Kiravian government in 20962. Standard Kiravic makes more use of...than Nohæric...It is the register taught in most schools and (broadly speaking) used in most high-circulation periodicals. Written materials produced by the Federal government for public consumption tend to adhere to Standard Kiravic conventions, as do the vast majority of business and trade documents. In states in peripheral Kiravic-speaking and non-Kiravic speaking areas of Great Kirav, Standard Kiravic is usually the register taught in schools, while in core Kiravic-speaking areas Nohæric is generally preferred in pedagogy.
*'''Standard Kiravic''' (Kiravic: ''Oskandikiravirona''), also known as ''tèlúverþarona'' ("schoolbook language") is the register of Kiravic that developed from standards laid out in the ''Verþa Danneoskandiskya'' ("Book of Lesson Standards"), a set of guidelines for primary-school Kiravic instruction produced by the Kirosocialist government. Standard Kiravic makes more use of...than Nohæric... Written materials produced by the Federal government for public consumption tend to adhere to Standard Kiravic conventions, as do the vast majority of business and trade documents. In states where Kiravic is not the majority language Standard Kiravic is usually the register taught in schools, while in natively Kiravic-speaking areas Nohæric is generally preferred in pedagogy.


*'''High Kiravic''' (Kiravic: ''Iĥtikiravirona'') is a conservative form of Kiravic that deviates as little as possible from the Kiravian dialect of Common Iatic used during the colonial period and is replete with lexical and stylistic borrowings from older and higher forms of Iatic. While it is the least commonly used of the three main registers, High Kiravic is encountered in many of Kiravia's greatest literary works, a growing number of higher-brow periodicals, and in some recent works of popular nonfiction (especially on historical or political topics). The language of legal documents and proceedings most closely resembles High Kiravic, earning it the informal appellation ''áldarona'' ("legalese").
*'''High Kiravic''' (Kiravic: ''Iĥtikiravirona'') is a conservative form of Kiravic that deviates as little as possible from the Kiravian dialect of Common Iatic used during the colonial period and is replete with lexical and stylistic borrowings from older and higher forms of Iatic. While it is the least commonly used of the three main registers, High Kiravic is encountered in many of Kiravia's greatest literary works, a growing number of higher-brow periodicals, and in some recent works of popular nonfiction (especially on historical or political topics). The language of legal documents and proceedings most closely resembles High Kiravic, earning it the informal appellation ''áldarona'' ("legalese").