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Segentova, Athara magarat, and Alteran Republics
Why? Where is it?
Razzgriz and Watambi
Oh, that's not even that far - if there are planes.
Pretty sure we have some dynamite stashed somewhere... So sure... You just gotta pay me first. :P
Dynamite? Stew!
Nope, honest to god TNT. It's. Ot illegal if you... Or your dad has a license...
Ok, but I speak Spanish
Speak Chinese.
For the first time we have a sort of language barrier
Remodio and Watambi
Athara magarat, San Montagna, Nhoor, and Livastonia
You are planning to have a South India-based nation right?
It will be very much possible for someone to call you a weirdo weeb in another language and then praise you in English "translation". Watch me.
"Have a nice day, good sir."
ऐज्कोना पोलरगटेमा involved थिए।
What do you mean Nyssic we clearly only speak Ashkriishi here.
Fair enough. But Nyssic is one of the major languages spoken across multiple nations. Is there more than one nation speaking Ashkriishi here :P
Speaking of this...actually how many nations here have like multiple languages that their government pretends are just "dialects" of one language even though they are often not even mutually unintelligible.
New aapelistan, that happens in Aprosia right? Or am I wrong? This sure does not happen in AM (the nation of weirdos where the number of languages spoken seems to increase every census). Anyone else whose gov has "they are all dialects of our state-mandated language" policy?
I didn't understand half of that but uhhh yeah.
Oh yeah i see now lol there are like 40 different versions of Chinese or something and all of them are completely different other than the writing system is the same lmao.
No, they are recognized as separate languages that are integral to the national identity of the federal subjects.
EDIT: However the language situation can be a bit complex... You have Severiók, which is the official language that most speak. However, it has both a written and a spoken variety and no one really speaks the written variety and the written variety is mostly used in official situations. The spoken variety is the one most people would speak, while being able to understand the written standard. Then there's the local languages, which have their own standard and their own dialects.
Depends on how you count and what you count as a different language and a dialect. The Chinese government claims that they are all dialects of Chinese, some consider the 10 or so dialect groups as separate languages and some consider a large portion of the dialects themselves to be separate languages. Heck, even the Mandarin of Beijing and Chongqing are rather different, even if you compare them as a non-speaker.
They have some common vocabulary as is to be expected but yea, a lot of it is different but from what I know, people can learn a different variety rather easily, they are related languages of course. And then there's Written Chinese or more like Written Mandarin, but written local varieties also exist, Cantonese being the most used local vernacular variety. They are used in more unofficial circumstances though.
Athara magarat and Wellsia
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