Kitonese

The Kitonese language (officially Ki Ngok 俟言; Keoi Ki 言俟 also used) is an Austronesian language spoken by around 680,000 people, primarily in Kiton (Ki Ton 俟東) where it is the national language. Since 63BC, Kitonese has been written with Chinese characters (naekwa-kuru 文邦, lit. "national writing"), though its vocabulary consists of a low percentage of Chinese words in favour of Sankrit terms. The language is known to be considerably complicated and highly stratified between sociolects; topolects vary considerably little.

History
The history of Kitonese is largely unknown to historical linguists. While Kiton lies in the region of Austronesia in the Pacific (located near Taiwan and the Philipines), it does not belong to the Malayo-Polynesian language family. It displays some peculiar features not common to the linguistic area, such as case declensions, verb conjugations and a SOV word order, leading some to classify it as an Indo-European language, a move which has caused much controversy.

The language known today as Kitonese was the local dialect of Akelaksa (keoi ake laksa 言域焦), the ancient capital of Kiton. When King Chohtei (Choutei Kiman 成丁君) moved his capital to Akelaksa, he declared the local dialect as the national language. To this day, Kitonese is widely used and universally understood in the Kingdom. While Kitonese is the official language in all states of Kiton, the State of Ailongeng'ai uses the local Sari'iki language as the official state language, which is unrelated to Kitonese.

Orthography
Below is the Kitonese alphabet:

Vowels: a e i o u

Onset consonants: b, by, ch, d, f, g, gw, h, j, k, kw, l, m, n, ng, ny, p, py, r, s, sh, t, w, y

Coda consonants: k, n