Details, Explanation and Meaning About Calistean

Calistean Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Calistean (Carlestia) is a language created by students in the Netherlands for the study of the origin of Romance and Germanic languages. It isn't spoken in the public, only in personal and school affairs. The language is 'spoken' in the fictional country Calisto. Calisto is a country where two civilisations live: the Calisteans and the Shanaevians, who are a sort of Scandinavic race.

Calistean (Navariim Carlëstia)
Spoken Calistean Culture
Region the Netherlands
Total speakers extinct
Dialects Shanaevian
Genetic
classification
Indo-European
 Italic
  Calistean
Official status
Official language Calisto
Regulated by Bjorn Bakker
Language codes
ISO 639-1 CYS
ISO 639-2 Car
SIL CLS

Grammatics

(if you see a " above a letter and a Calistean word, it's a thyrym, a reading sign in spelling and pronunciation of the words, like the accent grave. Calistean is a mixture of Romance Languages and Germanic Languages, so it has features of both. The verbs are the most difficult part of Calistean since there are 3 types of conjugations for different verbs:

- verbs that end with an -ä - verbs that end with an -ö - verbs that end with an -ü

As in Latin and Greek the words like 'I', 'you' etc. aren't written in text but the words for them do exist:

I - irihm you - sirihm he - hirihm she - 'hirihm it - hirihm' we - thirihm you - phirhm they - quirihm

These words are rearly used, the more simple forms like "I greet you" are written as ir, sir, hir, 'hir, hir', thir, phir and quir.

The pronunciation of the thyrym on certain words effects the length and tone of certain sounds. Example: agaïl (fire) is pronounced as a-GA-yel. Example: agö (to burn) is pronounced as a-GOO.

Emperor

Within the fictional history of Calistean, the Calistean Emperor of the second Era (251 b. Chr. - 187 b. Chr.) was the first to write the first baselines of Calistean writing. He invented the "Arnaïl Hereniir" (clean writing) which is still the base of all Calistean grammatics. He wrote this letter to the Shanaevian king at the time to test the new grammatics:

Arce,

Anlädh sir, üt heldü phir alt phokög til neo. Angläe sir y andë.

Inperö

"Arce, I greet you to warn you for the danger of the north. Be carefull and be safe. Inperö"

This is an Article on Calistean. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Calistean


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