Hiliorian Phineaner
This article or section is a work in progress. The information below may be incomplete, outdated, or subject to change. |
Bahasa Phineaner Kota Hilio Bahasa Phineaner Tri-State Areato RP 2616 | |
Spoken natively in | Phinbella |
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Region |
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Ethnicity | Hiliorian Phineaners, Tri-State Area citizens and Zaipinichi Peranakans in Kota Hilir and Tri-State Area |
Number of speakers | 1.4 million |
Language family |
Austronesian
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Writing system | Latin script, Arabic Script (Jawi) |
Source | Malaccan Malay (influenced with other dialect) |
Dialects |
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Hiliorian Phineaner, known as Kota Hilio Phineaner or Tri-State Area Phineaner, is a dialect of Phineaner language spoken in the Territory of Kota Hilir and Tri-State Area, it is spoken in most of the territory of Kota Hilir including Kota Hilir, part of the Hilio Tengah, Matunggoi, Interior and Chasin Precinct and most of the Tri-State Area including parts of Danville and Jefferson County as well as several other areas. It is not widely spoken in both territories. Hiliorian Phineaner is spoken there along with Common Tongue and Ferb Latin as well as Phineaner creoles in the Tri-State Area, and along with Baba Phineaner, Chetty Phineaner and Kristang in Kota Hilir.
There are about 1.4 million speakers in both territories. Unlike the Phinbellan language and other Phineaner dialects, the Hiliorian-Tri-State Phineaner has the most distinctive pronunciation and vocabulary, and has many similarities with the Gangwol dialect and the Phinbellan language, both variants in the Hiliorian dialect are likely tonal, it is a unique variant of the Phineaner spoken within both of these territories.
Hiliorian dialects according to specific precincts and areas vary. A native speaker can distinguish the Kota Hilir dialect from the Interior Precinct area, and can distinguish the Danville (urban area) dialect from the Jefferson County rural area.