Albic

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Albic
Spoken in: British Isles and elsewhere
Timeline/Universe: League of Lost Languages, UKW World
Total speakers: --
Genealogical classification: Europic

 Old European
  Albic
   South Albic
    Old Albic
     Low Elvish
     Macaronesian
   North Albic
    Caledonian
    Alfheimic
   West Albic
    Iverinian

Created by:
Jörg Rhiemeier 2000-

The Albic language family constitutes the main conlanging project of Jörg Rhiemeier. It is a family of languages spoken in the British Isles and the Canary Islands (and a few other places where British Elves settled) in the League of Lost Languages and also in the UKW World. The name "Albic" is from the Old Albic self-designation Alba. Old Albic was the dominant language of Britain before the immigration of the Celts; its speakers, the British Elves, were the bearers of a unique ancient civilization which gave rise to the Celtic and Germanic traditions of Elves, the Greek tradition of Hyperborea and possibly also of the Atlantis myth. They were essentially humans who behaved pretty much like the Elves of J. R. R. Tolkien (whose languages were influential on the creation of the Albic languages). The modern Albic languages (Low Elvish, Caledonian, Iverinian and Macaronesian) are spoken by tiny minorities; they descend from various vernacular dialects of Old Albic.

Three branches of the Albic family can be distiguished: South Albic, consisting of Classical Old Albic, Low Elvish and Macaronesian; North Albic, represented by Caledonian; and West Albic, to which belongs Iverinian. These three branches evidently already existed as dialectal divisions in classical times, with Classical Old Albic showing characteristic features of the South Albic branch.

The Albic languages seem to be distantly related to Indo-European (see Europic) and share a number of features (such as VSO word order and initial mutations) with the Celtic languages of the British Isles as well as with the Pictic family; these three families thus form a linguistic area (see this article for details). The Albic languages are active-stative languages of the fluid-S subtype; other interesting features include autosegmental behaviour of vowel features (leading to various umlaut and vowel harmony phenomena), marking of degrees of volition by various noun cases, and suffixaufnahme (i.e., possessors agree with the possessee in number and case in addition to their own number and case marking).

The Albic languages