Ocraitan Language

The Ocraitan Language is spoken in the Federation of Ocraita, and is a recognised minority language in the Norway, Iceland, Scotland, and Faroe Islands. The Ocraitan Language developed from Old Norse. Ocraitan has similarities to English and Scottish, such as loan words and grammar similarities, due to the British conquest of Ocraita.

Alphabet
X is rarely used, and is often replaced by C, K or Ck. Q/Qu is replaced with K or C.

A is used to replace Aa/aa. It was introduced in 1913.

Diatrics
Ocraitan has several letters with diacritic signs: é, è, ê, ó, ò, â, and ô. The Diatrics are used to clarify words such as homonyms

Grammar
The Ocraitan language's grammar shares similarities with English and Norwegian grammar.

Common Words

 * Hello - Hallo
 * Yes - Jas
 * No - Net
 * Of - Avf
 * The - De
 * And - Ond
 * This - Deste
 * That - Datt
 * You - Dou
 * Me - Me
 * I - Je

Common Phrases

 * Hal - Hello
 * Jasvien - Yes, please
 * Duyu - You (informal, often considered rude)
 * Åh-blå Skiymel - (lit; Oh, blue sky) Oh god/Oh no
 * Tak-skal-duha - Thank you very much
 * Detirkille - That is dumb/That is unfortunate