Erezlokish language

Erezlokish (erezlokish or erezlokish juha meaning Erezlokish language) is a that is spoken by approximately 5.382 million people in the nation of Erezloke. Erezlokish is endemic to the modern nation state, with almost no speakers other than the communities of the Erezlokish diaspora that live entirely in the.

Erezlokish is an ancient tongue which has survived through nearly 20 centuries without major alterations in its form. The nature of the language is derived from a mix of and Paleobalkan influences along the  sometime around 500 to 300 BC, as is made obvious by the language's grammar and vocabulary. The first written accounts of the language itself come from around the years 50 to 10 BC, in which was the beginning of a vast migration of both Erezlokish and Thracian peoples out of the Balkans following Roman occupation and rule in their native lands. As the language has barely changed since the migration, the written accounts of the migration have been interpreted by many scholars, and provide insights into the world of the around the transition from BC into AD.

The Erezlokish language itself has undergone relatively few changes since its conception more than 2,000 years ago, making it one of the worlds oldest languages which is still in use in its near-original form. The language was also instrumental in the reconstruction and classification of the Paleobalkan languages and their relation to and  as a whole, bringing together common vocabularies and certain phrases which survive in  and Erezlokish to this day.