Adygh Cant

Adygh Cant is the local language of Adyghan Prime, containing many complex sounds and consonants difficult to pronounce for a native speaker of the standard Imperial Low Gothic. Its alphabet was lost and reconstructed multiple times in the past, leaving the language open to acculturation and oral alteration. In the present day, Adygh Cant applies mostly in the rural areas of Adyghan Prime, while it is but a small part of the urban areas - where Imperial Gothic is much more preferred.

Grammar
Constructing a sentence in Adygh Cant is like solving a mathematical problem for a beginner. Changing one voice in a word can change the direction, time and the actor in the sentence while the order of some words can completely alter the intended meaning. This due to the sound richness of the Adygh Cant - there are 70 sounds in the standard Adygh Cant - more in some dialects.

The direction of the verb always comes as the prefix in the word, then the actor infix, then the verb itself altered accordingly to the actor and time of the verb, then the time suffix, then the plurality suffix of the verb, if there are multiple actors. To give an example:

To dissect the word "Tyqyregheblaghekh" - We were invited by them: "Ty" - actor prefix - we; "qy" - direction infix; "reghebla" - actor-altered verb - invite; "gh" - past tense - were; "ekh" - plurality suffix - them.

Akin to the actor prefix, the indicator of ownership is a similar one: "Sidzherakho" - my rifle; "Si" - my; "dzherakho" - rifle.

Alphabet
The current alphabet that is used on Adyghan Prime is merely a reconstruction of the one which was being utilised in the pre-heresy times; the original one lost to the ages, sought by archaeologists and linguists alike.

There are 58 consonants and 12 vowels in standard Adygh Cant. There are 3 variants of "T", 5 variants of "H", 3 variants of "L", 6 variants of "Sh", 8 variants of "K", 4 variants of "G", 3 variants of "C", 4 variants of "Ch", 5 variants of "D", 3 variants of "P", 5 variants of "J", 2 variants of "F", 3 variants of "U" and 4 variants of "I" - it's a phonologist's wet dream.

There are no upper or lower case characters. There are two sizes of characters in the script, short an long; while longer characters cover the entirety of the line vertically, short characters are written on the upper half of the line. Punctuation is the same as Imperial Gothic's.

Numerical characters are an amalgamation of both Roman and Hindu-Arabic numbers; The positioning of the lines on the characters change very similarly to Roman while being a single character like the Hindu-Arabic.