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<div style="float:left;margin:0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0;">[[File:Rubric Coast Partnership Flag.png|150px]]</div> The '''Rubric Coast Consortium''' is a treaty organization composed of the [[Talahara|United Communes of Talahara]] and the [[Tyreseia|Workers' Federation of Tyreseia]] formed in December 1890. Taking its name from the Rubric Coast, a shallow bay that borders the Periclean Sea from the western end of Talahara to the eastern border of Tyreseia, the Rubric Coast Consortium is a series of agreements ratified under the Rubric Coast Treaty. These  govern a variety of areas including free trade, freedom of movement, energy grid integration, defense arrangements, alliances between labour unions, and a currency union. The political isolation of the two states and the hostility of neighbouring and regional monarchist powers led to rapprochement in the 1880s. Despite this, both states had to reckon with each other's cultural, social, and political differences. The Rubric Coast Treaty was first drafted bilaterally with the intent of defining relations between the two states. The Treaty was ultimately signed and ratified in 1890. In its final form it was made into a living document that could change with the evolving relations of its two member states. Defining the borders of the nations, trade and tariff laws, and the rights of each state's citizens with regard to the other were among the earliest concerns. To achieve the purpose of the Treaty as a live document, the Rubric Coast Consortium was created to manage and deliberate on the relations of the member states. The Consortium is a treaty organization composed of government officials from each state, though power is delegated to agents and diplomats in practice. In the present day, the Rubric Coast Consortium primarily facilitates industrial development and the exchange of resources and experts between the two nations. Labour union alliances mean that industry standards for education and safety are similar between the two countries, and also facilitate temporary migration for work or full-term immigration. The Rubric Coast Consortium also includes military defense plans, as well as coordination in logistics and technological development. ('''[[Rubric Coast Consortium|See more...]]''')
<div style="float:left;margin:0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0;">[[File:ZibaJaujejua.svg|150px]]</div> '''Ziba''' ([[File:ZibainZiba.png]], ''ziba'', {{IPA-all|ziba}}) is the {{wp|language isolate|only}} extant {{wp|language}} of the eponymous Zibaic language family. It originated in and is the main language in [[Dezevau]] and northern [[Lavana]], and also has legal recognition in [[Hacyinia]] and [[Carucere]]. It is spoken natively by over 200 million people, making it the fifth language in the world by native speakers, and a further 100 million or so speak it non-natively. Ziba originated in southwest Dezevau several millennia ago, possibly as a {{wp|contact language}}. It spread by {{wp|trade}} and {{wp|diplomacy}} among the region's city-states and other polities, as well as through {{wp|human migration|migration}}, and association with [[Badi]]. In the medieval period, in large areas of northern Southeast Coius, Ziba was used in {{wp|public sphere|public}}, {{wp|commerce|commercial}}, {{wp|politics|political}}, {{wp|religion|religious}} and diplomatic life, but coexisted with a variety of languages which were {{wp|first language|natively spoken at home}}, in circumstances of {{wp|diglossia}}. At least in southwest Dezevau and among some {{wp|social class|classes}}, however, it was also a domestic language. The [[Aguda Empire]], founded in 1476, established Ziba as the {{wp|official language}} throughout its territories, using it in {{wp|administration}}, spreading it through commerce, deepening its Badist association, and generally promoting it as part of its {{wp|cultural assimilation|assimilative}} policies. The state of diglossia collapsed across much of the Aguda Empire's territory, in favour of Ziba {{wp|monolingualism}}. Ziba acquired more ethnic-political implication as a result of the empire's policies. The Aguda Empire also conducted early efforts at {{wp|language reform}} and {{wp|language standardisation|standardisation}}, with the Ziba {{wp|dialect continuum}} converging considerably, and the {{wp|koiné language|koiné}} Agudan Ziba becoming the basis for virtually all later {{wp|prestige dialect}}s of Ziba. During the colonial and post-colonial periods, Ziba lost much of its status and reach outside of present-day Dezevau and Lavana, as colonial or other national languages were promoted instead. It remains an important regional language, with many of its neighbours retaining {{wp|loanword}}s from it, and it being the {{wp|working language}} of the [[Brown Sea Community]]. Ziba is an {{wp|agglutinative language}}, with a great deal of {{wp|affixation|suffixation}} to create new {{wp|noun}}s and {{wp|adjective}}s, sharing similarities in this with the neighbouring {{wp|Austronesian languages|Vehemenic languages}}. {{wp|Verb}}s, in comparison, exist simply within a SVO {{wp|word order|sentence structure}}. Ziba's possible roots as a {{wp|contact language}}, and its storied use as a {{wp|second language}} in the public sphere may be linked to its simple {{wp|grammar}} and small {{wp|phonemic inventory}}; it has twelve {{wp|consonant}}s and five {{wp|vowel}}s ({{wp|monophthong}}s, which can form a further twelve {{wp|diphthong}}s). Its inventory is unusual, however, in not having any {{wp|rounded vowel}}s, {{wp|unvoiced consonant}}s/{{wp|voice (phonetics)|voicing distinction}}, and a number of other features which are very cross-linguistically common. Most Ziba is written in the Ziba script (cf. [[Carucerean Ziba]]), which is somewhere between an {{wp|alphabet}} and an {{wp|abugida}}; it has had a very close {{wp|phonemic orthography|phonetic correspondence}} since the {{wp|orthography|orthographic}} reforms of the Aguda Empire. ('''[[Ziba|See more...]]''')


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Revision as of 14:43, 5 November 2023

ZibaJaujejua.svg

Ziba (ZibainZiba.png, ziba, IPA: [ziba]) is the only extant language of the eponymous Zibaic language family. It originated in and is the main language in Dezevau and northern Lavana, and also has legal recognition in Hacyinia and Carucere. It is spoken natively by over 200 million people, making it the fifth language in the world by native speakers, and a further 100 million or so speak it non-natively. Ziba originated in southwest Dezevau several millennia ago, possibly as a contact language. It spread by trade and diplomacy among the region's city-states and other polities, as well as through migration, and association with Badi. In the medieval period, in large areas of northern Southeast Coius, Ziba was used in public, commercial, political, religious and diplomatic life, but coexisted with a variety of languages which were natively spoken at home, in circumstances of diglossia. At least in southwest Dezevau and among some classes, however, it was also a domestic language. The Aguda Empire, founded in 1476, established Ziba as the official language throughout its territories, using it in administration, spreading it through commerce, deepening its Badist association, and generally promoting it as part of its assimilative policies. The state of diglossia collapsed across much of the Aguda Empire's territory, in favour of Ziba monolingualism. Ziba acquired more ethnic-political implication as a result of the empire's policies. The Aguda Empire also conducted early efforts at language reform and standardisation, with the Ziba dialect continuum converging considerably, and the koiné Agudan Ziba becoming the basis for virtually all later prestige dialects of Ziba. During the colonial and post-colonial periods, Ziba lost much of its status and reach outside of present-day Dezevau and Lavana, as colonial or other national languages were promoted instead. It remains an important regional language, with many of its neighbours retaining loanwords from it, and it being the working language of the Brown Sea Community. Ziba is an agglutinative language, with a great deal of suffixation to create new nouns and adjectives, sharing similarities in this with the neighbouring Vehemenic languages. Verbs, in comparison, exist simply within a SVO sentence structure. Ziba's possible roots as a contact language, and its storied use as a second language in the public sphere may be linked to its simple grammar and small phonemic inventory; it has twelve consonants and five vowels (monophthongs, which can form a further twelve diphthongs). Its inventory is unusual, however, in not having any rounded vowels, unvoiced consonants/voicing distinction, and a number of other features which are very cross-linguistically common. Most Ziba is written in the Ziba script (cf. Carucerean Ziba), which is somewhere between an alphabet and an abugida; it has had a very close phonetic correspondence since the orthographic reforms of the Aguda Empire. (See more...)

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