Morasavian language

Morasavian (In̋hari̋s̬i cedȃlȃy) is a Morasaviac language spoken in Morasavia, where it is the sole official language and one of the national languages. It is the native language of the Inharisian ethnicity, which is the largest ethnic group in Morasavia. The language has over 17 million native speakers, more than any other Morasaviac language, and is the primary language of the Morasavian diaspora. Morasavian is also used as the lingua franca of all ethnicities in Morasavia, alongside.

Classification
Morasavian, though classified as a Tawlic language, it is greatly mutually intelligible with the rest of the languages falling within the Tawlic language family, hence it has its own subgroup. The language is more closely related to several regional languages spoken in Morasavia. Initially, all languages within the Morasaviac group were considered to be the same language, but during the 1900s, the vast majority of them were split into new languages. Morasavian has several dialects which are vastly different depending on the area, due to the heavy influence of languages such as Abwashkoha and Kafrouran on some dialects.

Varieties
There are eight main varieties of the Morasavian language, all of which are somewhat mutually intelligible with one another. The standard variety is mostly based on the Morasavian dialect spoken in Choklacha, the largest city of Morasavia, commonly referred to as Cedȃlȃyko Űmhiraniq ("Language of the people"). Other main dialects include:


 * Bebelesh - Spoken in the northwestern Zouitkhu province, mostly based on the dialect spoken in the Bebelesh island located off the country's northern coast. It is greatly influenced by the Zouitkhahe language, and is used as a common lingua franca in the province.
 * Joran - Serves as the lingua franca of the southern Digzarim, Cebashyaq, and the Xolbarinda provinces, it is mostly based on the Cebcesshe language. Due to the language heavily being influenced by it, Joran is often viewed as a language in its own.

Phonology
Morasavian is especially noted for being phonologically diverse. The language contains 20 vowels and 52 consonants, thus the language has one of the longest alphabets and the longest one based on the Latin script.

Vowels
Notes:
 * Morasavian features three vowel diphthongs that have their own respective letter, /əɪ/ (represented with the letter 'E̬'), /iə/ (represented with the letter 'Î'), and /əɛ/ (represented with the letter 'I̐'). All three of those vowels were formerly pronounced /əː/, /iː/, and /ɛː/ respectively, but later formed into diphthongs over time due to massive sound changes within the language during the late 11th century.
 * The language also has nasalized vowels, which are /ɑ̃/, /ẽ/, /ĩ/, /õ/, and /ũ/, all of which have their own letters. Morasavian formerly had an unnasalized /ɑ/ sound, as represented by the letter 'Â', but the former merged with its nasalized counterpart over time and the letter used for the unnasalized sound began to be pronounced as /a/.