Garonnian
Garonnian garonnaus, ling aronnaus | |
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Pronounced: | /ˈliŋ aruˈɲɔz/ |
Species: | Human |
Spoken: | France (specifically in a ) and partially Spain |
Total speakers: | 100 thousand |
Writing system: | Latin |
Genealogy: | Indo-European languages
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Typology | |
Morphological type: | Fusional |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | Ergative–absolutive |
Basic word order: | SOV |
Credits | |
Creator: | Danisht Dzakwan Daniel Willett |
Created: | November 2021 |
Garonnian (garonnaus), is a fictionally-constructed regional language intended to be spoken in France and Spain (specifically, in the region Nouvelle-Aquitaine, and autonomous communities Navarre and Aragon) made by an Indonesian pseudo-named Daniel Willett (in this wiki) in January 2022.
Overview
Unusually, Garonnian language forms an enclave of Sicilian vowel system (although technically the vowels /ɛ/ and /ɔ/ reduced to /i/ and /u/ from falling diphthongs), having unusual ergative–absolutive agreement, and bipersonal conjugation from Basque. If existed, Garonnian will have the most complex tense-aspect-mood combination, up to 1,689 forms, slightly more than that of Volapük.
From a cultural view, its speakers (Garonnians) are mixed Sicilians and Gallo-Italic peoples migrating from Italy to Bay of Gascony. The Garonnians also have a substantial Muslim minority from escapings of Reconquista (Garonnian: Reconquist), alongside the Christian majority. They originally have a separate country ruled by a monarchy, although for a while the Garonnians want to be annexed by France due to their mistrust to the monarchs.
Phonology
See Phonology
Grammar
Verbs
See Verbs