Arcadian
Arcadian is at the other end of the alphabet to Zelandish. It is a language sketched out by Andrew Smith -- a romance language designed reflect sound changes in Scots. As a designed language it covers no new ground than what I have already achieved in designing [Brithenig], and yet it deserves a repeal from redundancy, so I describe it here.
It was once suggested in correspondence with IJzeren Jan that Arcadian's homeland lies somewhere between the borders between France and Italy.
The name of the language, Arcadian was chosen as a reference to the Otago settlement of southern New Zealand under the patronage of the Free Church of Scotland, promoted as a utopian social project called 'Arcadia'.
Sound changes
The changes in the language is treated as if it was convential romance language.
Short vowels are treated the same as other romance languages in that e and i collapse together as e /ɛ/. Original short u in a stressed position becomes a front rounded vowel ö /ø/, otherwise o and u collapse together as o /ɔ/. Short and long a collapse together /a/.
Long u is unchanged /u/.
The other long vowels undergo a great vowel shift: long i becomes a diphthong /ɑɪ/ written ai. E rises to replaces it, written i. Long o becomes ö in all positions.
When a velar consonant after a vowel becomes a ʒ it creates new vowels before it disappears.