Vanadovian

Classification and Dialects
Strumian is an Eastern Romance language spoken in Strumia.

Writing System
There are however rules and exceptions due to the archaism of the Strumian orthography being very conservative to resemble more its mother tongue, Latin :
 * the letter c is pronounced /tʃ/ after e and i, e.g. : citâ (=city) /tʃitɐ/
 * the letter g is pronounced /dʒ/ after e and i, e.g. : agere (=to act) /adʒɛrɛ/
 * the letter l is mostly pronounced /w/, but after e and i it's pronounced /l/ and after palatalization induced by the letter e or i, it is pronounced /ʎ/, e.g. : sâltare (=to jump) /sɐwtarɛ/; legere (=to read) /lɛdʒɛrɛ/; aleâ (=wing) /aʎɐ/
 * the letter n is pronounced /ɲ/ after palatalization induced by the letter e or i and is pronounced /ŋ/, if followed by the letter g, e.g. : neu (=new) /ɲu/; sâng /sɐŋ/
 * the letter t is pronounced /ts/ after e and i, e.g. : terâ (=soil) /tsɛrɐ/
 * the letter ê is phonologically undistinguishable from the letter e; indeed ê has an ethymological purpose, e.g. : to distinguish between : ave (=birds, plural from avi ) and avê (=hello)