Thread:User talk:Siebrand/Additional version of Nynorsk (nn)?

Seeing that the language policy is liberal enough to include formal versions of languages (and even dead languages), I thought that I should ask this:

There exists another version of the Nynorsk written standard, namely Høgnorsk. This is at present an unofficial version of Norwegian, but nonetheless, I dare say that it is pretty well-defined. After all, to a large extent, it consists of what used to be the offical version of Nynorsk - before it was decided that Nynorsk should be merged with Bokmål (nb); a goal which has since been abandoned. However, the changes to make Nynorsk and Bokmål more similar have more or less not been undone; such that many important differences between Høgnorsk and Nynorsk remain:


 * Høgnorsk has generally a more complex grammar, including additional classes of nouns, more irregular verbs and more object forms (a differentiation between dei ('they') and deim ('them') which is not present in Nynorsk, for example)
 * a lot of different spelling, sometimes (often?) reflecting different pronounciation

a few more things: on the Nynorsk Wikipedia, articles written in Høgnorsk are allowed behind the "prefix" Hn/ and are found in their own category. These articles exist in parallell to the articles in official Nynorsk. Furthermore, some of the Wikimedia user interface has already been translated into Høgnorsk, as can be seen on this wiki which is written in Høgnorsk.

Is there a possibility that this version of the Norwegian language could have its own localisation with a fallback to Nynorsk? What say you?