Ebrarese language

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The Ebrarese Language (sometimes known as Ebrarian in Anglish) is a language derived primarily from the ancient East-Arhoman language, which is the national language of Ebrary and the native tongue of the Ebrarian people. Like Anglish, it uses a 26 character Aroman writing system with no accents.

Dialects

The five major dialects of Ebrarese are the Eastern, Western, Central, Gallasian, and Vorstland dialects.

Alphabet

Ebrarese alphabet
Number 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
Letters (upper case) A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Letters (lower case) a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
Names a be ce de e ef ge ha i jota ka el em en o pe cu er es te u ve duple ve ix ypsilon zeta

Grammar

Main Article: Ebrarese grammar

The grammar of Ebrarian is largely similar to the other Arhomantic languages, but has become somewhat more simplified due to the influence of the Vorstish language. Ebrarese lacks adjectival agreement and continuous verb tenses, but retains articles.

Reference and examples

Common surnames

  • Ferrero
  • Baran
  • Gulielmos
  • Sartor
  • Bruno
  • Fernando
  • Castello
  • Rodrigo
  • Lupo
  • Rubo
  • Rubi
  • Blanco
  • Martin
  • Bernardo
  • Roberto
  • Ricardo
  • Carlo(s)
  • Lucas
  • Jons
  • Guerra
  • Renaldo
  • Abel
  • Alberto
  • Villa
  • Campo
  • Alexandro(s)

Common given names

Male names

  • Henrico
  • Ricardo
  • Carlo(s)
  • Carolo
  • Eduardo
  • Gulielmo
  • Georgio
  • Petro
  • Jacobo
  • Jon
  • Ludovico
  • Philippo
  • Maximo
  • Mauritio
  • Timotheo
  • Stephano
  • Christino
  • Daniel
  • Abraham
  • Julio
  • Marco
  • Michael
  • Christophoro
  • Antonio
  • Samuel
  • Alexandro
  • Alberto

Female names

  • Anna
  • Matilde
  • Maria
  • Victoria
  • Christina
  • Elizabeth
  • Sara(h)
  • Agar

External links