Proto-Ayja-Né

Classification and Dialects

 * Proto-Ayja-Né
 * Ko-Ayja
 * Uylebisan
 * Tthit’e-Xwăłe
 * Tthit’e
 * Xwăłe
 * Northern
 * Nanjey'a
 * Njhuy'é
 * Kwxwąątsătwth
 * Central
 * Southern
 * Né
 * Northern
 * Southern

Vowels
Vowels have a long and short form as well as low and high tones.

Phonotactics

 * 1) Syllables are CV(C)
 * 2) No /h/ or /ʔ/ in the coda of a syllable
 * 3) No consecutive syllables each with an aspirated consonant
 * 4) No affricates in complex onsets
 * 5) No palatal consonants in a complex coda
 * 6) All nasals must be homorganic with the next section

Sound Changes Leading to Nanjey'a
From Proto-Ayja-Né, it is thought that the language split into two distinct geographical groups separating the language. The first group is considered the Kot'a-Ayja, because it is though that these people lived on the Kot'a and Ayja peninsulas located in the now Xwúúp'a'a sea. By this point the unvoived plain plosives in Proto-Ayja-Né had become ejective and the voiced plain plosives lost their voicing:

/p, t̪, k/ > /p', t̪', k'/

/b, d̪, g/ > /p, t̪, k/

Root Construction
Proto-Ayja-Né was likely based on a bi-lateral root system with the use of apophony common to change meanings of roots slightly.

Bi-lateral roots are based on two consonants with a general meaning. The general meaning of the root becomes more specific as the root is declined into other 'secondary roots'. Although all modern languages derived from Proto-Ayja-Né have no well defined root systems, traces of the primary bi-lateral roots system can still be seen.

Conjugation
Some although some consider Proto-Ayja-Né a conjugating language, most think that it attached its pronouns to the end of its verbs to determine subject and object:

mood-aspect-VERB(TENSE)-SubjectPronoun-IndirectObjectPronoun-DirectObjectPronoun

Proto-Ayja-Né verbs also have aspects marked by prefixes.Some aspects combine with others to create even finer distinctions. The following are all the common aspects:
 * 1) stative
 * 2) inchoative ("to begin to...")
 * 3) predisposional ("to tend to...")
 * 4) susceptative ("to... easily")
 * 5) frequentative ("to... often")
 * 6) protractive ("to... continuously")
 * 7) incessant ("to... incessantly")
 * 8) durative ("to... for a long time")
 * 9) iterative ("to... over and over again")
 * 10) intensive ("to... very much")
 * 11) resultative ("to... completely")
 * 12) approximative ("to... somewhat")
 * 13) semblitive ("to appear to...")
 * 14) increasing ("to... more and more")