Alternative History

Based in List of languages by number of native speakers-wikipedia and world population --Fero 20:34, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

Hey Fero: very important point you have integrated!! just edited your text...please continue introducing ideas and new points !! we need more complexity ^^ Xi'Reney 20:46, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

The Rise of Greek[]

Is it possible Greek could get added to the list? I'm sure now younger Egyptians and Libyans are learning Greek as their second language, there's going to a be an influx of Greek immigrants (soon) to southern Italy, and they really are the strongest power in the Eastern Med. Depending on contact between Greek and Transylvania, there might be a revival of Romanians learning Greek. Mr.Xeight 01:57, October 29, 2009 (UTC)

Status of Russian[]

The bit on Russia's "limited" influence should change, since we're finding out more about Siberia and its growing world influence, especially over the last few years. Benkarnell 10:55, November 27, 2009 (UTC)

North Germany and Prussia[]

North Germany is regarded as the successor state of the FRG and is therefore a better representative for post-Doomsday Germany in this articel.

Besides, I do not like Prussia.

If there are any improvements to the Prussia article you would like to suggest, feel free to do so on its talk page. However considering how few German speaking nations there are in this world, I see no reason why we can't list all of them. Mitro 18:57, January 13, 2010 (UTC)

Old Prussian??[]

No, no, no. They're not going to revive a dead language. The prestige language of Prussia is obviously German (look at the eagles!), and the other language is going to be Polish. They're not the State of Israel. Benkarnell 13:37, October 20, 2010 (UTC)

Cross-wikiness[]

I see possible collaboration between this wiki and the guys at the Conlang Wiki...


Although who knows how much a language really can change in merely a quarter of a century.

Sicilian[]

We know that Sicilian is the official language of Sicily, while, before Doomsday, it was simply a regional, unrecognized (yup, the Italian government never recognized any regional language, simply speaking of them in terms of "dialects") language, in the island of Sicily (also having variants in southern Calabria and in the Apulian sub-region of Salento).

With the emergence of Sicily as a regional power, and with Sicilian being an official language, I suppose that Sicilian would become an important language, used for trading purposes and so on.

I'm sure that foreign people trade with Sicily, and surely Sicilians trade with foreigners, despite the tensions the Palermitan government has with its neighbours.

Someone should make a subsection about Sicilian.

Or should I do it myself? Nomad93 (talk) 10:51, September 26, 2012 (UTC)

Power to you. Lordganon (talk) 06:14, September 27, 2012 (UTC)

lingua franca[]

potuguese should be the lingua francaOldsvito2999 (talk) 01:05, 4 July 2024 (UTC)