Difference between revisions of "Standard"

From The Coursebooks Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with 'Standard is the standard language of the verse. It is almost indesdinguishable from Common, which is believed')
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Standard is the standard language of the verse. It is almost indesdinguishable from [[Common]], which is believed
+
Standard is the standard language of the verse. It is almost indesdinguishable from [[Common]], which is believed to date all the way back into [[Antiquity]], despite not being the language of the [[Ancients]].
 +
 
 +
There are many derivations of standard throughout the [[known worlds]] but most are easy enough. There are also numerous other languages, but Standard is the most common written and spoken lanugae.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
==Condradictions==
 +
In the [[Course Books]] there are numerous contradictions as to which is the older and which the newer, though the glossarry states unequivicably that Standard is the modern tongue and Common is the older.

Revision as of 21:12, 29 October 2010

Standard is the standard language of the verse. It is almost indesdinguishable from Common, which is believed to date all the way back into Antiquity, despite not being the language of the Ancients.

There are many derivations of standard throughout the known worlds but most are easy enough. There are also numerous other languages, but Standard is the most common written and spoken lanugae.


Condradictions

In the Course Books there are numerous contradictions as to which is the older and which the newer, though the glossarry states unequivicably that Standard is the modern tongue and Common is the older.