Ashno-Verethian languages: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Infobox language family |name = Ashno-Verethian |region = Pre-colonial era: Northern Etzavaz and Southern Ashnan<br/> {{small|{{circa|200 million}} native speakers}} |family = One of the world's primary language families |familycolor = Ashno-Verethian |protoname = Proto-Ashno-Verethian |children = |child1 = Arthan† |child2 = Ashno-Angkat lang...")
 
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Today, the individual Ashno-Verethian languages with the most native speakers are Erayi, Dirhassian and Hashdezi each with over 50 million native speakers; many others are small and in danger of extinction.
 
Today, the individual Ashno-Verethian languages with the most native speakers are Erayi, Dirhassian and Hashdezi each with over 50 million native speakers; many others are small and in danger of extinction.
   
All Ashno-Verethian are descended from a single ancestor language, linguistically reconstructed as [[Proto-Ashno-Verethian]], spoken sometime in the [[Human history|Neolithic to Early Bronze Age]]. The geographical location where it was spoken, the [[Proto-Ashno-Verethian culture|Ashno-Verethian homeland]], has been the object of many competing hypotheses; the common consensus supports the Shtigu hypothesis, which posits the homeland to be the [[Shtigu River]] basin in what is now [[Teshkasta]] and [[Menkhemon]]. By the time the first written records appeared, Ashno-Verethian had already evolved into numerous languages spoken across much of Etzavaz and Western Ashnan. Written evidence of Ashno-Verethian appeared during the late Iron Age in the form of Arthan. The [[Arthan alphabet]] is one of the oldest known writing systems across the [[Four Seas]] region, descending from [[Marphat script|Marphat logograms]].
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All Ashno-Verethian languages are descended from a single ancestor language, linguistically reconstructed as [[Proto-Ashno-Verethian]], spoken sometime in the [[Human history|Neolithic to Early Bronze Age]]. The geographical location where it was spoken, the [[Proto-Ashno-Verethian culture|Ashno-Verethian homeland]], has been the object of many competing hypotheses; the common consensus supports the Shtigu hypothesis, which posits the homeland to be the [[Shtigu River]] basin in what is now [[Teshkasta]] and [[Menkhemon]]. By the time the first written records appeared, Ashno-Verethian had already evolved into numerous languages spoken across much of Etzavaz and Western Ashnan. Written evidence of Ashno-Verethian appeared during the late Iron Age in the form of Arthan. The [[Arthan alphabet]] is one of the oldest known writing systems across the [[Four Seas]] region, descending from [[Marphat script|Marphat logograms]].
   
 
[[Category:Language families]]
 
[[Category:Language families]]

Latest revision as of 07:45, 27 August 2024

Ashno-Verethian
Geographic
distribution
Pre-colonial era: Northern Etzavaz and Southern Ashnan
c. 200 million native speakers
Linguistic classificationOne of the world's primary language families
Proto-languageProto-Ashno-Verethian
Subdivisions
Present-day distribution of Ashno-Verethian languages in Etzavaz and Ashnan:
  Ashno-Angkat
  Cernian
  Kholic
  Southern Verethian
  Western Verethian

Countries where an Ashno-Verethian language
  has official status
  has co-official status
  is recognized as a minority

The Ashno-Verethian languages are a language family native to the northern half of Etzavaz as well as the Eranosphere. Some languages of this family—namely Hashdezi—have expanded through colonialism in the modern period and are now spoken across several continents. The Ashno-Verethian family is divided into several branches or sub-families, of which there are two main groups with languages still alive today: Ashno-Angkat and Verethian; one branch, Arthan, is now extinct. The Verethian sub-family is further subdivided into four groups: Cernian, Kholic, Southern Verethian and Western Verethian.

Today, the individual Ashno-Verethian languages with the most native speakers are Erayi, Dirhassian and Hashdezi each with over 50 million native speakers; many others are small and in danger of extinction.

All Ashno-Verethian languages are descended from a single ancestor language, linguistically reconstructed as Proto-Ashno-Verethian, spoken sometime in the Neolithic to Early Bronze Age. The geographical location where it was spoken, the Ashno-Verethian homeland, has been the object of many competing hypotheses; the common consensus supports the Shtigu hypothesis, which posits the homeland to be the Shtigu River basin in what is now Teshkasta and Menkhemon. By the time the first written records appeared, Ashno-Verethian had already evolved into numerous languages spoken across much of Etzavaz and Western Ashnan. Written evidence of Ashno-Verethian appeared during the late Iron Age in the form of Arthan. The Arthan alphabet is one of the oldest known writing systems across the Four Seas region, descending from Marphat logograms.