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Faraneit

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Faranit
Pronounced: /fær-æn-It/
Timeline and Universe: theoretically this universe, future
Species: Humanoid
Spoken: Northwest and central Lhined
Total speakers: ~20 million
Writing system: Own
Genealogy: Unknown, assumed to be derived from Hungarian, Quencha, and Hindi daughter languages
Typology
Morphological type: Aggulating (and sometimes isolating)
Morphosyntactic alignment: Nominative-Accusative
Basic word order: VSO
Credits
Creator: Humancadaver101 aka Schwhatever aka Buckfush530
Created: December 2004

Faranit is the most prominent dialect of the Faranih people on the continent of Lhined on a currently undiscovered planet. The various colonizers traveled to this planet on the eve of a massive worldwide war on Earth. It is most closely linked to the Hindi, Quencha, and Hungarian colonizers, which attempted to colonize several regions directly on the western edge of the current range of the language.

Faranit vs. Faranih vs. Faraneih

  • Faranit -means only the language
  • Faranih -originally meant only the ethnic group, but recently colloquially came to mean the language as well
  • Faraneih -is a colloquial term for the ethnicity

Phonology/Orthography

  • Consonants: /d ʕ b f θ ʔ zh k l ɻ m n p q ɹ s t v z s/
    • Romanized As: <d c b f fh h j k l lh m n p q r s t v z sc>
  • Vowels: /æ e 3 i I ɔ o ɐ œ/
    • Romanized As: <a ae e ei i o oe u ue>
  • Phonological Constraints: CVC(VC)

Syntax

Faranit is VSO and generally aggulating. Negatives are placed behind verbs like adverbs and other modifiers, including subordinate clauses. Inversion is used to form interrogative clauses. Pronouns usually decline by case, but in certain forms use participles like nouns. Verbs conjugate based on tense (remote past, near past, present, future), mood (subjunctive, indicative, and in archaic dialects imperative), and person (first, second, and third). Pronouns decline for person, number (just singular and plural), case (nominative, accusitive, possessive, and in plural forms dative/ablative), and animacy/gender(he/she - it in most forms except poeleizih: he vs. she/it). For nouns possessive and dative/ablative are formed from participles and nominative and accusitive are assumed from context and word order.

Stress

Stress usually falls on the first syllable:

han-ak-elh-in

heaven

Deviations, however, are not difficult to find:

fhen-oet

field(s)

Voice

Passive voice is nonexistent, aside from the use of kaej, to be, as a descriptor. This results in dependence on teripes the genderless, numberless fourth person, when the subject is unknown. Reflexive is formed from the accusitive form of the appropriate pronoun.

History

The Faranih culture is beleived to have arisen circa 750 AC (after colonization), when a variety of refugees from the final collapse of the Temenucha civilization (derived from both Hindi and Quencha speakers) moved southward across the Kupimiceh desert and into the "mediterranean" coastal plain and absorbed into the colonizers from the collapsed Guscek colony of Hungarians had relocated to from the southern plains. The cultures creolized to some degree and expanded as far south as the Trovvog peninsula (Timeritah in Faranit). The extinction of the indigenous, omnivore reptoids left the cavernous, food producing, hollow trunks of the puzeil trees available, leading to their adoption as an emergency shelter (not large enough for more than three children, unfortunately), food source (edible roots available from the hollow area), wood, and companion to a variety of edible and medicinal mosses. By 850 AC this arangement had given way to fullscale horticulture. The subsequent increase in population pushed the excess out of mescinefh (the forest of the mediterranean coastal plain) and east to the Laescelh, the hilly region seperating the humid subtropical savannahs-grasslands and mediterranean coastal chapparel. The region was largely uninhabited because its western border was the driest area of the chapparel and its northern and eastern border was outside of the main path of the monsoons, which passed over the grassland, leaving little rainfall, until unloading on Laescelh, because of its slightly higher elevation. The hills also contained a valuable domesticate: Amaranth. Amaranth had feralized after colonization, allowing it to develope into a naturalized and highly productive grain. After arriving before 900 AC a small scale agricultural package was created circa 950 by combining Amaranth (aka fhequt) and puzeil and gathering various fruits and vegetables. By 1400 AC noepav, a leafy vegetable, vonabep, a fiber crop, liroedez, a melon, had been domesticated along with several more localized crops and goats had been introduced from the east. By 2300 AC the wheel was developed and Hidiviz, spice was introduced. From 3000 AC onwards, the Faranih dominated trade between the Southeastern Cang-ur, Northeastern Mubala, and the Southeastern Etimri. Circa 3400 AC, the Poeleizih, a militant fringe religious group, invaded southern Mubala and attempted to create a sacred theocracy there under their rule. The Poeleizih radicals steadily drifted to even more radical ideals, until in 3489 AC declaring their patron god, Poelesc, the only true god and began actively persecuting polytheists and in 3562 threatening the Faranih heartland, Laescelh, which had remained polytheistic, with invasion. In response the most populous and productive region dominated by the Hakih, devotees to Hakaenah the water goddess, banned together under the leadership of the militaristic Hirih, devotees to Hirelanah, goddess of vengence and storms. This new and successful relationship became the Harapah. Unfortunately this system proved no less noble and was fraught with internal corruption and a hierarchy supported by ruthless oppression of opponents. A later Poeleizih invasion(circa 3650) was more successful and managed to install the Poeleizih in power in several non-Harapah areas. The ballad of Lheletaeh, the Lheletimen, is the story of the driving of these occupying forces out of the city of Hejaz and the establishment of the Hejazarifh(circa 3655), a sacred state surrounding Hejaz, which denied access to certain groups as an official, very public form of disapproval. Historically, the Harapah and the Poeleizih have been denied entrance. After the invasion of Hejaz by the Harapah circa 3700, the predominately Hamedih, Helescih, and Levezih inhabitants relocated to the semi-arid mountains in the north-central Kupimiceh desert and founded Hejarin, meaning new Hejaz.

Faranit Lexicon

Faranit Lexicon

External Links

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