Foclaininthian Languages

Revision as of 15:16, 13 May 2024 by Heldervin (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Template:WIP}} {{Infobox language family | name =Foclininthian | region =Foclininth | familycolor =Indo-European | family =Foclininthian | protoname =Proto-Foclininthian | child1 =Imbrodesian | child2 =Pelletian | child3 =''Namian''{{Extinct}} | child4 =Senesin | child5 =Tabeteau | iso2 =foc | iso5 =foc | map = | mapcaption = | notes ={{ublist|{{Exti...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Foclininthian
Geographic
distribution
Foclininth
Linguistic classificationFoclininthian
Proto-languageProto-Foclininthian
Subdivisions
ISO 639-2 / 5foc
Notes
  • indicates the Namian branch of the language family is extinct

The Foclininthian languages are a language family native to overwhelming majority of the Foclininthian continent. It has over 18.7 billion native speakers, second only to the Verdelainiatic Languages. Some Foclininthian languages, such as Saxburgish and Old Phileran, have expanded via colonialism in the modern period and have minorities in most nations. The Foclininthian family is divided into five major branches, with four groups that still have living languages: Imbrodesian, Pelletian, Senesin, and Tabeteau. The extinct branch is the Namian group. Each branch is based in a subcontinent of Foclininth.

Today, the individual language in the family with the most speakers worldwide is Saxburgish, with over 200 million speakers. The branch with the most speakers is the Pelletian branch.

All Foclininthian languages are descended from a single prehistoric language, namely Proto-Foclininthian, spoken sometime during the early stone age. The location where the language was spoken, the Foclininthian Plateau, has been the object of study by several linguists across the globe. By the time that the first written records had been made, Proto-Foclininthian had expanded to accomadete thousands of speakers. By the late Iron Age, the language had split into five distinct accents spoken in the five subcontinents, which later developed into the five branches.