Artistic Forces/Hundarin

Hundarin (Chinese: 混搭琳話, Bopomofo: ㄏㄨㄣˋㄉㄚㄌㄧㄣˊㄏㄨㄚˋ, Pinyin: Hùndālínhuà), also known as Hundahua (Chinese: 混搭話, Bopomofo: ㄏㄨㄣˋㄉㄚㄏㄨㄚˋ, Pinyin: Hùndāhuà) or simply Linhua (Chinese: 琳話, Bopomofo: ㄌㄧㄣˊㄏㄨㄚˋ, Pinyin: Lín huà), is the primary language of the Dongwuren, a race of anthropomorphic animals and mythical creatures from the Dongwuren Dynasty. Despite being a constructed language, it is an artificial form of the Chinese language mixed with Mandarin and Xiangnan Tuhua as both a lingual and formal derivative and inspiration after Mandarin and Cantonese. Its written forms are Hanji, which is based on the Written Chinese, Renshu, which is modeled after Nushu, a syllabic derivative of the Chinese characters that was used exclusively among women in Jiangyong County in Hunan province of southern China, and Bopomofo, a Chinese transliteration and writing system for Mandarin Chinese and other related languages and dialects within mainland China and Taiwan.

Etymology
The term Hundarin comes from the combination of the three Chinese characters: Hun (混), which means "mix" and is also derived from the two river tributaries (namely Liao and Yalu Rivers) in northeastern China, Da (搭), which means "to attach", and Lin (琳), which briefly defines a "beautiful jade". Also, this term is additionally followed by Hua (話), which is commonly used for certain words, talks, and languages.

Factions

 * Dongwuren Dynasty

In other languages

 * Dutch: Hundarijn
 * Esperanto: Hundareno
 * French: Hundarin
 * German: Hundarin
 * Italian: Hundarino
 * Japanese: 混搭琳語 (Hundaringo)
 * Korean: 훈다린 오렌지 (Hundalin olenji)
 * Latin: Hundarin
 * Polish: Hundarynka
 * Portuguese: Hundarim
 * Russian: Хундарин (Khundarin)
 * Spanish: Hundarín