High astroxian

Classification and Dialects
High astroxian, also known as early astroxian and more rarely as proto-astroxian, is an extinct romance language spoken from 500 AD to 900 AD, and is the earliest form of what is today the astroxian language. It is generally accepted that high-astroxian started at 486 AD with Marjinte Rakene's "jiedice dēn socjatan" ("judgement of society") wich describes how young native astroxian speakers couldn't understand inscription on stones written in vulgar latin when the first settlers arrived, while everyone could only two generations ago. It also corresponds with the beginning of friendly relationships with the astroxians and the Gu people, and the slow absorption of them within the astroxian people, which is shown by the fact that high-astroxian is the first form of astroxian to contain words of gugaθi origins. It also is accepted that high-astroxian ends around 900 AD, when the gugaθi language went extinct. 

Writing System
High astroxian was written in the earliest known form of the kjenvari alphabet, which was created based on the latin alphabet and the gugaθi scripts to simplify communication with the astroxians.

Declention of nouns of astroxian root:
High astroxian still had most of the declentions of latin, appart from the ablative whose role was taken by other oblique cases. While the singular forms are mainly herited directly from latin, the plural and newly formed dual show -t and -h suffixation respectively, from influence from local languages, gugaθi.

Hereafter are the seven declention patterns of high-astroxian, shown by the words " dēs pader " the father, " dēs heur " the time of the day, " dēr kera " the heart or love, " dēr femin '" the woman, or femininity in general, " dēr

Declention of gugaθi loanwords:
Gugaθi borrowings have their own declention system which is heavily infuenced by their original gugaθi declention systems: herafter are the declentions of the words "dēs giṛ " the finger, " dēs plo " the anthem, " dēr lolna " the settlement and " dēr ṫali " name given to the common astrasian apple that spead to mean apples in general.

Note that only the most common nouns of gugaθi origin follow this declension pattern, as most loanwords eventually followed the native inflexional system. Note that nouns ending with other letters than o or i bore the gugaθi plural prefix sa-.

Example text
Latin:

Pater noster, qui es in cælis

Sanctificetur nomen tuum ;

Adueniat regnum tuum ;

Fiat uoluntas tua

sicut in cælo et in terra.

Panem nostrum quotidianum da nobis hodie,

et dimitte nobis debita nostra

sicut et nos dimittimus debitoribus nostris

et ne nos inducas in tentationem

sed libera nos a malo.

Amen.

High astroxian:

Patrē notte, ke es endēi celi,

Sanktifēon tom num,

Adallat tor rennur,

Fat toa vulat

Surēi Celi asi dēi Terri.

Astroxian:

English translation: