Sebric language
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Sebric | |
---|---|
Modern Sebric | |
Sebriaç - Sebrie språjk | |
Pronunciation | [seːbʁiaʃ] |
Native to | New Sebronia |
Region | North-Thuadian Germanic Belt |
Ethnicity | Sebrics |
Native speakers | [L1]: 107,790,000 (2020) L2: 14,043,000 FL: 12,300,000 |
Thuado-Thrismaran
| |
Early form | |
Standard forms | Standard Sebric[1]
|
Expanded Latin script (Sebric alphabet) | |
Signed Sebric | |
Official status | |
Official language in | New Sebronia Sekidean Union |
Recognised minority language in | |
Regulated by | Sebri Kommitē fer Riigadçrebjingœn (Sebric Commitee for Orthography) |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | se |
ISO 639-2 | seb |
ISO 639-3 | Variously:seb – Standart Sebricsnj – Northbatro-Sebriclan – Lanterianloe – Lyreesetvs – Tretversishsar – Sarbianvrm – Vermiansvs – Westbatro-Sebricbrn – Bernishsvb – Sverbanmld – Mitlanderanosr – Osberishesp – Espianvln – Valanianmrv – Meraveseesc – Especiankae – Kæreseaer – Ardrenan |
The Sebric language (Sebriaç, pronounced [seːbʁiaʃ] ( listen)) is a North-Thuadian Germanic language mainly spoken in New Sebronia and its neighbors, being an official language in New Sebronia, as well as in the Sekidean Union and a regional recognized language in the neighboring countries of Qazhshava and Tiskaiya. Being in the Batro-Laakyan language group, it shares similarities with Bakyernian and the other surrounding germanic languages and is the successor of the almost extinct Traditional Sebric.
Categorization
The sebric language has - due to it being present in all over New Sebronia and experiencing a lot of influence from neighboring countries - a broad variety of different dialects, which are categorized in 2 large cultural groups, 6 regional groups, or 17 sub-cultural groups, as following:
- Sebric
- Batrec
- Eastern Sebric
- Lyreese
- Tretversish
- Vermian
- Northern Sebric
- Northbatro-Sebric
- Lanterian
- Bernish
- Southern Sebric
- Westbatro-Sebric
- Sarbian
- Sverban
- Eastern Sebric
- Batro-Germanic
- Western Sebric
- Especian (Kisto-Germano-Sebric)
- Espian (Kisto-Batro-Sebric)
- Meravese
- Central Sebric
- Midlanderan
- Valanian
- Osberish
- South-Western Sebric
- Kærese
- Ardrenan (Qazhshavo-Sebric)
- Western Sebric
- Batrec
The dialects mostly differ by pronounciation, but also most distinguishably by using very different, regional based particles and interjections. While no Sebric speaks perfect Standart Sebric, closest are the Northern Sebric dialects due to the lack of foreign influence, while dialects like Ardrenan, Kærese and Especian are heavily influenced by the bordering neighbors Qazhshava, Tiskaiya and Kistolia.
Geographical Distribution
TBA
Orthography and Phonology
Alphabet
Punctuation Marks
Phonology
Grammar
Noun inflection
Genders and numbers
Cases
Adjective inflection
Genders and numbers
Cases
Comparisons
Adverbs
Verb inflection
Persons and numbers
Moods
Voices
Tenses
Prefixes
Auxiliary Verbs
Pronouns and articles
Conjunctions, prepositions, particles and interjections
Numbers
Keyboard layout
- ↑ "Standart Sebric" vocabulary and pronounciation is not to be considered a commonly spoken form of Sebric, as its dialects varies greatly from region to region without actually ever matching the standardized language perfectly