Creeperian Spanish: Difference between revisions

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| fam3            = <!-- up to fam15 -->
| fam3            = <!-- up to fam15 -->
| protoname        =  
| protoname        =  
| ancestor = Ayreoshubic
| ancestor = [[Ayreoshubic]]
| ancestor2        = [[Ayreoshubic Spanish]] †
| ancestor2        = [[Southern Ayreoshubic]] †
| ancestor3        = [[Old Creeperian]] †
| ancestor3        = [[Ayreoshubic Spanish]] †
| ancestor4        = [[Old Creeperian Spanish]] †
| ancestor4        = [[Old Creeperian Spanish]] †
| ancestor5        = [[Middle Creeperian Spanish]] †
| ancestor5        = [[Middle Creeperian Spanish]] †

Revision as of 19:12, 22 December 2019

Creeperian Spanish
Español Creeperiano
Native toCreeperopolis
RegionCreeperopolis, El Salvador, Papal State
EthnicityCreeperian
Native speakers
540 million (2019)
Early forms
Dialects
  • Atlántidan
  • Castillianan
  • Deltinian †
  • Salvadoran
  • San Salvadoran
  • Senvarian †
  • Senvekian †
Latin (Spanish alphabet)
Official status
Official language in
Creeperopolis Creeperopolis
File:Flag of the Principality of El Salvador.png El Salvador
Flag of the Papal States (1825-1870).svg Papal State
Regulated byAcademia Creeperiano de la Lengua
Language codes
ISO 639-1Cs
ISO 639-2Csp
ISO 639-3Csp
File:Languages of Creeperopolis.jpg
Atlántidan (Red), Castillianan (Blue), Salvadoran (Green), San Salvadoran (Dark Gold)
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.

Creeperian Spanish is the official form of Spanish spoken in the countries of Creeperopolis, El Salvador, and the Papal State. The language is broken into four main dialects spoken throughout the reaches of Creeperopolis. Creeperopolis uses voseo Spanish as its written and spoken form. Vos is used, but it is written and pronounced "Bos". Bos can be heard in television programs and can be seen in written form in publications. Usted is used as a show of respect, when someone is speaking to an elderly person.