Vanadovian

Classification and Dialects
Sipanian is an isolated language spoken in Sipania

Writing System
There are however a few particularities : The Latin script is one of three script used in Sipania. The Latin alphabet is the offical script ("Vatanopíśa" = "State Script") used for official documents, taught at school, used by most media and used in almost all daily situations. Introducing the Latin script for writing the Sipanian language was a political decision taken in 1919 with the independance of Sipania from the Ottoman Empire. The Sipanian political class tried to seperate culturally the Sipanians, who were using the Persian-Arabic abjad, especially the Muslim Sipanians, from the Ottoman Turks and simplify alphabetization. The Latin script is also prefered by the Catholic Church in Sipania (before the introducing of the Latin script for the Sipanian language, the Bible was only printed in Latin).
 * Palatalization is marked by the letter y following another vowel, however the letter i and í alone palatalize the preceeding consonant, e.g. : śyéxi (=king) /ɕɛ:xi/; tíra (=house) /tji:ra/
 * The letter l is pronounced as /l/, if followed by the letters e and é, e.g. : lénka (=flower) /lɛ:nka/
 * Voiced letters in final position become devoiced, e.g. : mígad (=you all look) /mji:ɣat/

The Persian-Arabic abjad may also be used to write Sipanian (note that only the seperated form will be shown, however the letters do change depending on their position in the word) : The Arabic script is mainly used by the Muslim community in Sipania for reading the Quran, but it is also used by some media and in a limited range, in everyday situations mainly in Muslim areas in Sipania. Reading and writing the Arabic script is taught in Islamic schools, called "Madrása". In "Classical schools" (opposed to "Technical schools"), students are taught to be able to read at some extent the Arabic-Persian script. The Arabic-Persian abjad was introduced by the Ottomans after their coqest of Sipania at the 1500's to write Sipanian.

The Hebrew abjad may also be seen to some extent : The Hebrew script is however not used to write Modern Sipanian, but it was used to write Classical Sipanian, which is still used for liturgical purposes in the Sipanian traditional belief, called Baalism. It is also often used for signatures. Every student in Sipania is taught how to red and write the Hebrew abjad (students in "Classical schools" even have to study Classical Sipanian). Even if it doesn't seem that any vowel must be induced through context (in opposition to the Arabic script, where vau may stand for v, o or u), the schwa /ə/, which was present in Classical Sipanian, is never written and must be induced.

Let's compare :
 * king : śyéxi - שיא״חאי - شیهءخی (śyáxay)
 * house : tíra - טוּי״רא (teíra)