About: Han languages   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/PDlGHJO0vCxodnfF58NVIQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The Han languages were a group of languages spoken in Kara-Tur. It comprised a number of languages descended from the root Han language, including Koryo, Kozakuran, and Wa-an, and possibly others. Kozakuran and Wa-an remained closely related; some considered them only different dialects of the same language. There was perhaps 65% comprehension between the two. Thus most folk of Shou Lung, Wa, and even Kozakura found the Koryo language relatively easy to pick up, and most Koryoans in turn found Kao te Shou, Wa-an, and Kozakuran easy to learn as well.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Han languages
rdfs:comment
  • The Han languages were a group of languages spoken in Kara-Tur. It comprised a number of languages descended from the root Han language, including Koryo, Kozakuran, and Wa-an, and possibly others. Kozakuran and Wa-an remained closely related; some considered them only different dialects of the same language. There was perhaps 65% comprehension between the two. Thus most folk of Shou Lung, Wa, and even Kozakura found the Koryo language relatively easy to pick up, and most Koryoans in turn found Kao te Shou, Wa-an, and Kozakuran easy to learn as well.
  • Splitting off from the rest of Central Hannic at around the 7th century, the languages were largely based within southern Ruzon. Since the promulgation of Baybayin, the ancestral Tagalog language has been copiously attested. By the early 17th century, Tagalog started to evolve into three distinct forms, with vulgar Tagalog being the most widespread–displacing the languages to the north and to the south. Between the late 17th and 18th century, it further diverged with the current standard variant of Han evolving by 1760.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:conworld/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:forgotten-r...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:forgottenre...iPageUsesTemplate
nativeName
  • Han youyanman
  • Hán yùyáne
  • Mga salitang Han
  • Minhangsal
  • 「韩语言」川へ二
Date
  • 2016(xsd:integer)
dia
  • Northern
  • Southern
Agency
familycolor
  • Austronesian
Name
  • Han languages
  • Hannic languages
speakers
Region
  • Hawaii
  • Han archipelago; Guam; North Mariana islands; Palau; Micronesia
Sign
  • Signed Han
Regions
Family
Script
dateprefix
  • est.
abstract
  • The Han languages were a group of languages spoken in Kara-Tur. It comprised a number of languages descended from the root Han language, including Koryo, Kozakuran, and Wa-an, and possibly others. Kozakuran and Wa-an remained closely related; some considered them only different dialects of the same language. There was perhaps 65% comprehension between the two. Koryo's vocabulary comprised many words evolved from the old Han tongue, as well as loanwords from Wa-an and Kao te Shou that had been borrowed over centuries. Koryo's vocabulary was very different to that of Kozakuran, but its grammar was very similar. Koryo sounded more like Wa-an than Kao te Shou, but it was as simple to use as Shou. Thus most folk of Shou Lung, Wa, and even Kozakura found the Koryo language relatively easy to pick up, and most Koryoans in turn found Kao te Shou, Wa-an, and Kozakuran easy to learn as well.
  • Splitting off from the rest of Central Hannic at around the 7th century, the languages were largely based within southern Ruzon. Since the promulgation of Baybayin, the ancestral Tagalog language has been copiously attested. By the early 17th century, Tagalog started to evolve into three distinct forms, with vulgar Tagalog being the most widespread–displacing the languages to the north and to the south. Between the late 17th and 18th century, it further diverged with the current standard variant of Han evolving by 1760. Han itself is the most spoken language, with a hundred million native speakers (two-thirds of the Han population) and sixty million second language speakers. It serves as the lingua franca of the Han archipelago, and many Hans are either bilingual or trilingual; speaking Han, their native language, and lastly, English.
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