Pargaolo

From NSwiki, the NationStates encyclopedia.
Jump to: navigation, search

The language known as Pargaolo originates in the nation of Pargalo but is used in some parts of Tinis. It is characterized by amazingly unusual rules for most grammar but for complex communications, the unusualness turns into an insanely complex set of variable letters for even simple words. In the complex form, twelve different spellings of the word house for instance could denote things such as your feelings towards that house, memories of a house, the importance of a house to others, and one spelling even adds in the information that the house is burning down. Having around two hundred letters only compounds the problem. Pargaolo originates from Anchient Tinisian, which was much more simple in comparison and is partially incorperated in Pargaolo intact. Most speakers of Pargaolo can read and understand spoken Anchient Tinisian with out assistance. In the Union of Tinis, Pargaolo has combined with several other languages, including English and the native languages in the land currently known as Tinis (which included previously many speakers of Anchient Tinisian oddly enough) to form the language known as Modern Tinisian, which maintains much of the Pargaolo alphabet but is much more simple in all levels of grammar.