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Oksien

Oksien is a fictional language family created for worldbuilding and conlang practice. In its canonical descriptions, Oksien is spoken by the Oksian peoples of the Ulara archipelago, a coastal region in the northern seas. The term and its dialects are used in speculative fiction and design exercises to illustrate linguistic diversity and testing of conlang methods.

Oksien comprises several closely related varieties, commonly grouped into the main dialects Oksien Proper, Oksin, and

Phonology features five vowels and a consonant inventory including stops, fricatives, nasals, and approximants. Some dialects

Morphology includes evidential and aspect markers; noun phrases rely on post-nominal modifiers and demonstratives; verbs encode

In worldbuilding circles, Oksien is cited as a case study for linguistic plausibility in fictional settings

Oksari.
The
family
is
described
as
predominantly
agglutinative
with
a
flexible
word
order
that
can
shift
for
emphasis.
Core
syntax
tends
to
be
subject–object–verb,
with
pronouns
and
demonstratives
carrying
persistent
agreement
markers
while
nouns
generally
do
not.
exhibit
vowel
harmony
and
tone
contrasts,
though
tone
is
not
universal
in
all
descriptions.
The
writing
systems
used
in
descriptions
include
a
syllabary
known
as
the
Oksan
script
and
Latin
transliteration.
aspect
and
mood
via
affixes.
Oksien
is
commonly
described
as
a
tool
for
exploring
how
phonology
interacts
with
morphology
in
constructed
languages.
and
appears
in
a
range
of
fan
works,
role-playing
games,
and
language-learning
projects.