Marjizen language

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Marjizen
Med Marziyen
Native toGabrielland
RegionGornyan Region
EthnicityMarziyens
Native speakers
300,0000 (2020)
Gabrielt
  • Angyarak
    • Ligintian
      • Gornyan
        • Marjizen
Latin script
Official status
Official language in
West Marjizen province
Recognised minority
language in
Gornyan Region
Language codes
ISO 639-1mj
ISO 639-2mjn
ISO 639-3
Marjizen.png
Distribution of Marjizen speakers in the Gornyan region
  Majority language (>50%)
  Minority language (>20%)
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For a guide to IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

The Marjizen language (Standard Gabrielt: មដមរជិឋេន "Mada Marjizen", IPA: /mada mard͡ʒiˈzɛn/, Marjizen: Med Marziyen, IPA: /mɛd marziˈjɛn/) is a Gornyan Ligintian language spoken primarily in the West Marjizen province within the Gornyan region, although speakers also exist in the neighboring Marjizen province, North Marjizen province, and the Lirgyinta province in the Artadash region. Around 300,000 people speak the language according to the latest 2020 Gabrielt national census, and is one of the least spoken Gabrielt languages. Together with the other Gornyan Ligintian languages, it forms a dialect continuum spanning from the Gornyan region deep into the Artadash region. Although closely intelligible, these languages are usually classified as separate. The Marjizen language is the easternmost Angyarak language in terms of the geographical setting of its original speakers.

The development of the Marjizen language is similar to that of other languges in the region, being a descendant of literary Gabrielt which branched into the various modern Angyarak langauges scattered throughout Gabrielland. The Marjizen language has retained several archaic features of the language such as the collective number and the perfective clitic in verbs, however has eroded a lot of the traditional case and declension system found in its predecessors. A "Marjizen" identity was first documented in the early 20th century during a time of rising Gabrielt nationalism, and the rallying of the easternmost Gabrielts under a single "Marjizen" banner. It was officially recognized as a sepaarate language by the Gabrielt Language Council in 1935 after several proposals were submitted from Marjizen people themselves.

The Marjizen language an official language in the province of West Marjizen. Although the Marjizen language has severaal notable dialects, the dialect of the capital is seen as the standard form of the language regulated by the Marjizen Language Board, and is the form used when communicating accross dialects to avoid misunderstanding. It is the official language used in administration, schools, business, and almost all aspects of daily life. The Gornyan language is taught as a secondary language for most people, and is also related as the Gornyan language is also a Gabrielt language, although forming its own branch. The Gornyan language, however, is rarely heard in areas where Marjizen is natively spoken, and many Marjizen are not fluent in the Gornyan language, rather switching to Standard Gabrielt when a need of understanding arises.

In the neighboring provinces where the Marjizen language is a minority, services offered in the language are available in the localities where a sizeable populatiaon of Marjizen live, and access towards the language's education and teaching are available at select points. It is also recognized as one of the 6 recognized minority languages of the Gornyan region, and is recognized as provincial-wide language by the confederate government.