Avreça

Avreça

Avreça is an Indo-Romance language spoken in a variety of communities in Western Europe and the United States, as well as in the Middle East, South Asia, and East Asia. It shares many features with most Romance languages, and is primarily fusional.

Vocabulary and Dialects
Avreça's vocabulary is consists of a relatively even mix of Romance language vocabulary, primarily drawing from Spanish, Italian, and Catalan, and of Kannada and Hindi-Urdu vocabulary.

Avreça has two main dialects, Western and Eastern, and two minor dialects, Northern and Southern. The main dialects occupy the position of prestige dialects, having separate traditions of literature and spoken language. The Northern and Southern dialects are considered to be inferior dialects, particularly for their tendency to simplify vowels and merge consonants. Their vocabulary is largely similar to that of Western and Eastern, respectively.

There is also an older version of Avreça, known as Classical Avreça, in which there is an more complicated grammar, as well as slightly different pronunciation. Classical Avreça is used only in old religious texts, and is debated as a medium through which foreign religious texts, such as the Bible and Vedas, can be translated.

Consonants

 * Only in Classical Avreça or in limited cases in Modern Avreça.

Vowels

 * Western uses a and Eastern uses ɑ.