Introduction

Phonology

The phonology aims to be easy for native speakers of most languages, while having enough phonemes and syllables to avoid long or too similar words. Although some languages might not differentiate all the sounds, given the policy to avoid minimal pairs for some pairs of phonemes, it should be enough

Consonants

Consonants are: m, n, p, t, k, b, d, g, f, s, x, w, l ,y

Vowels

Five vowels: a, e, i, o, u

Phonotactics

A typical syllable structure is CV(C). Any consonant can be used as the onset (including no consonant at all). For the coda, only a subset of consonants can be used, namely: m/n, s, l, f, x, y. Given some combinations are not allowed (yi iy wu uw), The total unique syllable count is about 1200

Core words vs loanwords

Minimal pairs

Vocabulary

Grammar

Nouns

Verbs

Verbs always end with [a]. They can be both transitive and intransitive, however they are never bi-transitive. Inside a sentence, verbs can be chained in a following manner: SV¹O¹V²O²…

As an example, let's introduce following words:

ako I; me
saya to be located at; to exist (at)
domo home; house
moka eat; drink; consume
supu soup; stew; any liquid food

Using them, we can create a following sentence:

Ako moka supu saya domo - I eat soup at home (lit. I eat soup be-in home)

Important thing to notice is that while the natural translation suggests a usage of preposition (at home), the actual part of speech used is a verb. More literally this sentence could be translated as (and is equal in meaning to): "I eat soup and am at home"

Particles

Adjectives and adverbs

Suffixes

Example texts