eipuhdasta
eipuhdasta is a hypothetical linguistic construct used in theoretical linguistics and speculative fiction to illustrate how languages might be designed to explore typological extremes. It is not a real language but a placeholder model that researchers and writers deploy to study the interactions of grammar, morphology, and word order. The name is a coined neologism and does not tie to any single natural language.
Etymology and usage: The term's form is intentionally opaque, drawn from invented morphemes to avoid bias toward
Commonly described features (varying across sources) include ergative-absolutive alignment, rich case systems, and agglutinative or polysynthetic
Applications include testing computational parsers, illustrating typological concepts in teaching, and analyzing how artificial languages balance