. "Adygh Language"@en . . . "According to the linguistic researches, Adygh Language appeared approximately 19.000 years before the beginning of the Age of Terra, making it 40.000 years old in lifespan but 60.000 years old in history, due to the hibernation of the Adygh during their voyage to Adyghan Prime, which took 20.000 years. In comparison with the other languages throughout the Imperium, it is possible to say that the Gothic languages are distant descendants of the ancient Adygh Language. And even though this information is not officialized by the Imperium itself, it is being thought so on Adyghan Prime."@en . "According to the linguistic researches, Adygh Language appeared approximately 19.000 years before the beginning of the Age of Terra, making it 40.000 years old in lifespan but 60.000 years old in history, due to the hibernation of the Adygh during their voyage to Adyghan Prime, which took 20.000 years. In comparison with the other languages throughout the Imperium, it is possible to say that the Gothic languages are distant descendants of the ancient Adygh Language. And even though this information is not officialized by the Imperium itself, it is being thought so on Adyghan Prime. Starting from the beginning of M3, Khase has put strict regulations on the use of Adygh Language to preserve it and make it survive among the other Terran superpowers' languages. It was a dying language at that time, with no more than a million speakers. Upon the colonisation of Adyghan Prime, the efforts of its preservation did not cease but changed course. Language is something that constantly evolves, thus rather than preserving the language from getting assimilated, they focused on preserving it from simplification and keeping its core pure. In M31, when the Imperial assimilation began, many Gothic words entered the daily life language of the Adygh. Thus the efforts of preservation from assimilation began once again, continuing to this day. Though the daily life use of Imperial Gothic is limited with urban areas, rurals don't speak it in their daily lives unless it is needed, insistently speaking their own language."@en . . .