. . . "The Jelbic Languages (Jelbij\u00E9k or Jelbij\u00E9 Knsag'ad) are a subdivision of the Jelbo-Tukaric (OOC: Ural-Altaic) language family, and are therefore distantly related to Panmuan, Bianjie, or Turjak. The Jelbic languages are spoken over a wide area covering most of Nort-West Majatra, and Jelbic speakers comprise a majority of the population in Jelbania, Vanuku, Pontesi, and Barmenia, with significant minorities in Beiteynu, Deltaria, and Selucia. There are three major Jelbic languages, namely Jelbek, Brmek, and Pntek, and with the exception of formal speech all three are mutually intelligible. Old High Jelbic, an archaic Jelbic language, is the classical standard of the Jelbic languages."@en . . . . "Jelbic"@en . "Jelbic languages"@en . . . . "Jelbo-Tukaric"@en . . "jel"@en . . . . . . . "The Jelbic Languages (Jelbij\u00E9k or Jelbij\u00E9 Knsag'ad) are a subdivision of the Jelbo-Tukaric (OOC: Ural-Altaic) language family, and are therefore distantly related to Panmuan, Bianjie, or Turjak. The Jelbic languages are spoken over a wide area covering most of Nort-West Majatra, and Jelbic speakers comprise a majority of the population in Jelbania, Vanuku, Pontesi, and Barmenia, with significant minorities in Beiteynu, Deltaria, and Selucia. There are three major Jelbic languages, namely Jelbek, Brmek, and Pntek, and with the exception of formal speech all three are mutually intelligible. Old High Jelbic, an archaic Jelbic language, is the classical standard of the Jelbic languages."@en . .