Eskayan language

Eskayan is an artificial auxiliary language of the Eskaya people of Bohol, an island province of the Philippines. It is grammatically Boholano, the native language of Bohol, with a substituted lexicon. While Eskayan has no mother-tongue speakers, it is taught by volunteers in at least three cultural schools in the southeast interior of the province.

Eskayan
Bisaya
Iniskaya
Eskayano
Created byMariano Datahan
Attributed to Pinay, ancestor of the Eskaya people
Dateca. 1920–1940
Setting and usageSong, prayer, teaching, reproduction of traditional literature. Intended to establish a distinct indigenous culture on the island of Bohol in the Philippines.
Ethnicity3,000 (2013)
Users550 (2013)
Purpose
Writing system
Eskayan script (syllabary)
SourcesEncryption of Cebuano, with lexical influence from Spanish and English
Language codes
ISO 639-3esy
Glottologeska1234

Eskayan has a number of idiosyncrasies that have attracted wide interest. One of its most immediately remarkable features is its unique writing system of over 1,000 syllabic characters, said to be modeled on parts of the human body, and its non-Philippine lexicon.

The earliest attested document in Eskayan provisionally dates from 1908, and was on display at the Bohol Museum until September 2006.

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