Iakrian language

The Iakrian language (Iakrian: iakromis), or simply Iakrian, is a language spoken in the country of Iakronemy, which is where the [CS] island is.

Locutors
In ACNV, every character knows how to speak Iakrian, although only Cauwak (briefly) and Emtsa are seen speaking it.

Letters
Iakrian has 35 letters: 9 vowels (A, E, I, Ə, O, Ô, U, Û, Y) and 26 consonants (B, C, Ç, D, F, G, H, J, K, L, Ļ, M, N, Ņ, P, Q, R, S, Ş, T, V, W, Ŵ, X, Z, Z̧). A symbolic and a Latin version are in use.

Trivia

 * The subject order for Iakrian is the same as in English.
 * The letters W and Ŵ are rarely used, and are mainly found in loanwords.
 * Some of the letters have very defined or similar to other existing letters:
 * A is nearly identical to the Korean ㅏ (a).
 * C is identical to the Latin C and the Cyrillic C (S), although it makes the sound /x/, not /s/ or /k/.
 * D ressembles a cut off B.
 * E ressembles a Latin U.
 * F ressembles a fishing hook.
 * Ə is written in a similar way as the capital form of omega (Ω).
 * K ressembles the Japanese hiragana character ku (く).
 * L ressembles a glottal stop but barred.
 * N is a rhombus.
 * Ņ and W ressemble anchors.
 * O is a barred version of itself, but it does not make the sound /ɵ/.
 * Ô is similar to the character of the letter's sound in the IPA (/ʌ/), with a strike on the bottom right.
 * P resembles a minuscule Latin N (n).
 * Q is similar to the Cyrillic character Ћ (ć) used in Serbian.
 * S is identical to one of the forms of the minuscule Latin A (a).
 * T ressembles the symbol for the palatal click (ǂ).
 * U is a checkmark.
 * V ressembles a testtube.
 * Ŵ looks like a surprised and happy face at the same time, like a merger between and a reference to the Japanese katakana characters shi (シ) and tsu (ツ).
 * X ressembles the character of the letter's sound in the IPA (/ʤ/) in some way.
 * Z is identical to the Latin X and Cyrillic X (Kh), but like C, it makes a different sound.
 * Z̧ looks like a trident.
 * The characters with accents can also be written with an H (consonants) or a U (vowels) after them. In the case of Ņ, it can also be replaced with "ng".