Adwan

The Adwanic language, (English: Adwan, French: Adouanne, Spanish: Aduána, Pacardian: Adwana, Adwan: Aðwána) is an inflecting, isolated language. It is the language of the Adwanic People, or the Chiðaùm Aðwany.

Features:
 * Adwan is a fusionally synthetic language. This means that words change depending on their usage (I am would be það, yet you are could either be þus or þuš, depending on the number).
 * Adwan also expresses a very agglutinative nature when it comes to verbs, which conjugated by stringing affixes together.
 * Verbs in Adwan are conjugated to four persons, two numbers, three tenses, three aspects, four voices, four moods and three polarities.
 * Adwan lacks auxilliary verbs and modal verbs, instead making extensive use of affixes to change modality, aspect, tense, mood and voice.


 * Adwan is a pro-drop language; the person is conjugated into the verb.
 * Adwan declines nouns for number, and grammatical case. Gender is lost in most nouns, though some can be declined for gender by adding respective affixes.
 * Adwan has 7 cases; nominative, genitive, accusative, dative, ablative, locative and vocative, and 2 numbers; singular and plural.
 * Adwan experiences 7 kinds of phonetic mutations: gemination, nasalization, aspiration, ablaut, consonant mutation, ellision, and palatalization.
 * Loanwords to Adwan are generally rare; about 5-15% of Adwan's vocabulary is shared with other European languages (while mesa means table in Spanish, it means island in Adwan).
 * Coordinating conjunctions have two, very different forms, which depend on what they're connecting. While clauses use traditional, separate conjunctions, listed items use proclitics, or morphemes that work like affixes and depend on the word they're attached to, but are grammatically independant.
 * Adwan is syllable timed; stress is always put on the penultimate syllable unless stated otherwise (acute accents over vowels show irregular stress rules, which are incredibly common).

Lexicon
The Adwanic Lexicon can be found here.

Phrases
Adwanic Phrases can be found here.

Original Script
Before assimilation to a Latin or a Cyrillic Alphabet, Adwan used a phonetic Script; an alphabet that utilized diacritics for punctuation, breathings, etc. The Latin alphabet has been modelled to retain some features of the Adwanic Script -- such as the use of a phonemic script rather than using digraphs, save for "ch". The Adwanic Script was actually just a script I invented in my old chemistry class and used for a while before giving it to Adwan.

A further explanation on the script comes as soon as I can get used to my tablet again.

Phonology
Adwan empoys 32 consonants, 8 vowels (16 if you count nasal vowels) and 13 diphthongs.

Consonants

 * The phoneme /b/ does not exist in Adwan.
 * The phoneme /ɬ/ is not an allophone of /l; however, [l̥] is an allophone of [ɬ].
 * The phoneme /ʔ/ is not represented in writing, nor does it have any significant effect (it is purely dialectical).
 * Bilabial plosives (‹p›), palatal approximants (‹j› ‹ɥ›), velar fricatives (‹h›), velar approximants (‹w›), and alveolar lateral fricatives (‹ɬ›) can never end a word.

Vowels
Note: All nasal vowels are allophones of a vowel plus a velar nasal (ŋ). Therefore, /aŋ/ is the same as /ã/, so on and so forth. However, nasal vowels are elongated in geminations, along with their consonants, though it isn't common to see denasalization in gemination. Example: In «Cóňňma», the /ɔ/ is either kept as a nasalized vowel and elongated, leaving it to be /t͡sɔ̃:ma/, or denasalization occurs and the gemination occurs as normal, /t͡sɔŋ:ma/.

Diphthongs
In diphthongs, the phoneme [ɛ] changes to [e].

Phonotactics
Syllables in Adwan follow a relatively simple set of rules in formation. Usually, they follow a CV pattern, though it is not uncommon to see CCV, CCCV, and CCVCC. Typically, the generalized rule for syllables in Adwan is (C)(C)(C)V(C)(C)(C).

Note, diphthongs are considered one vowel, and ch is considered one consonant.

However, the end to words in Adwan is limited, as certain letters cannot end an undeclined word:
 * Nouns in Adwan end in either a, c, d, ð, ď, e, f, g, ğ, l, m, n, r, þ, s, š, t, v, z, ž, and ż.

Alphabet
The Adwanic alphabet consists of 36 letters:

A C Č D Ð Ď E F G Ğ H CH I J K L Ł M N Ň O Ö P R Þ S Š T U Ü V W Ẃ Y Z Ž Ż

Consonant-wise, Adwan is completely phonemic. For the most part, everything is written how it is sounded out, in Adwan. The Adwanic alphabet does, however, lack a few things:

The letters Bb, Qq, and Xx do not exist in Adwan, as the phoneme /b/ doesn't exist in ANY Adwanic word, and Qq is either transcribed as "kw" or "k", while Xx is transcribed "ks", "z", or "gz".

Latin Alphabet Extensions
Adwan employs 12 letters that are foreign to the basic Latin alphabet. These letters are considered letters on their own, rather than letters with diacritics.
 * ‹Č,č› represents the phoneme ‹tʃ›, as in the English word chocolate.
 * ‹Ð,ð› represents the phoneme ‹ð›, as in the English word therefore. When word final, represents the same sound as þ, though when word final and has an apostraphe, it retains the voiced sound. Note, however, apostraphe's are not used in official writing.
 * ‹Ď,ď› represents the phoneme ‹dʒ›, as in the English word jam.
 * ‹Ğ,ğ› represents the phoneme ‹ɣ›, which doesn't exist in English. It is a ‹g›, but smoother and in the back of the throat, almost like a ‹g› version of ‹x›; it is represented as in the Greek word γάλα. This grapheme is actually written as g with a háček, but is written with a breve due to unicode difficulties.
 * ‹Ł,ł› represents the phoneme ‹ɬ›, which doesn't exist in English. It is almost like saying ‹š› and ‹l› together but quickly, or blowing while your tongue is curled back. It is represented as in the Welsh word lloyd.
 * ‹Ň,ň› represents the phoneme ‹ŋ›, as in the English word sing. Note that the ‹g› isn't pronounced, and the ‘n‘ is velarized.
 * ‹Ö,ö› represents the phoneme ‹ø›, which doesn't exist in English. The closest sound would be the ou in would, only a bit higher. It is represented as in the French word peu, or the Norwegian word søt.
 * ‹Š,š› represents the phoneme ‹ʃ›, as in the English word cash.
 * ‹Ü,ü› represents the phoneme ‹y›, which doesn't exist in English. Say ee and round your lips as if saying ‹ö›. It is represented as in the French word tu.
 * ‹Ẃ,ẃ› represents the phoneme ‹ɥ›, which doesn't exist in English. It is like a ‹j› + ‹w› sound (y + w for non-IPA users). It is represented as is in the French word lui.
 * ‹Ž,ž› represents the phoneme ‹ʒ›, as in the English word vision, or as in the French word je.
 * ‹Ż,ż› represents the phoneme ‹dz›, as in the English word cards. 

Acute Accent; Stress & Vowel Change
Adwan adds acute accents (and double acute accents to all vowels with umlauts) to all vowels to add stress if the stress isn't on the penultimate syllable. However, when on single syllabic words, the acute accent lengthens the vowel. While vowel length is not phonemic in Adwan, it is imperative in distinguishing single syllabic words.
 * ‹Á,á› represents stress on the ‹a›.
 * ‹É,é› represents stress on the ‹e›.
 * ‹Í,í› represents stress on the ‹i›.
 * ‹Ó,ó› represents stress on the ‹o›.
 * ‹Ő,ő› represents stress on the ‹ö›.
 * ‹Ú,ú› represents stress on the ‹u›.
 * ‹Ű,ű› represents stress on the ‹ü›.
 * ‹Ý,ý› represents stress on the ‹y›.

Ďa, which means already, would be [ɟa], yet Ďá, which means now, would be [ɟa:].

Grave Accents; Diphthong Formation
As Adwan is a phonemic language, double vowel clusters do not form diphthongs, but are pronounced each, usually with a glottal stop separating them. A vowel cluster that has the second vowel with a grave accent creates the diphthong. Grave accents in Adwan act as glides, pushing two vowels together rather than their usual separate pronunciation.
 * ‹À,à›
 * ‹Eà, eà›; [e̯a]; represents the sound in the word can, stressed to sound slightly country.
 * ‹Ì,ì›
 * ‹Aì, aì›; [aɪ̯]; represents the sound in kite, or eye. 
 * ‹Eì, eì›; [eɪ̯]; represents the sound in cake, or fate.
 * ‹Öì, öì›; [øɪ̯]; represents the sound of ‹ö› plus ‹y› or ‹i›.
 * ‹Uì, uì›; [uɪ̯]; represents the sound in the Spanish word muy. It's a combination of "oo" and "ee", for non-IPA readers.
 * ‹Üì, üì›; [yɪ̯]; represents the merging of ü and i, said in one syllable. This sound doesn't exist in English.
 * ‹Ù,ù›
 * ‹Aù, aù›; [a̯u]; represents the ow sound in cow.
 * ‹Eù, eù›; [e̯u]; represents the eu sound in the Spanish word Europa. Like ew but with an open "e" rather than "i".
 * ‹Iù, iù›; [ɪ̯u]; represents the sound in English ew in one syllable.
 * ‹Où, où›; [o̯u]; represents the o sound in the English word float. 
 * ‹Öù, öù›; [ø̯u]; represents the merging of ö and u, said in one syllable. This sound doesn't exist in English.
 * ‹Yù, yù›; [i̯u]; ew made longer, like a British ew.

Ě, the optional E
Other than acute and grave accents, vowels don't have any other diacritics, except for ‹e›. The letter "e" can also have a háček added to it, though the use in this is quite confusing. Quite literally, ‹ě› is what seems to be a "decision" letter, for while every other letter in Adwan is pronounced -- as Adwan is a phonemic language -- the ‹ě› can either be silent or pronounced. The letter ‹ě› has two uses.
 * The usage of ‹Ě ě› is only seen with verb affixes. With the formation of verb affixes, the syllables grow in size and many times, the stress falls upon the e's that separate affixes from having potentially scary consonant clusters. ‹ě›, though it is pronounced the same as a regular old ‹e›, is put in between affixes to not only separate them orthographically, but to indicate that the ‹e› is optional. With verb affixes, if the speaker can pronounce the affixes without the separating ‹e›, then they can, but the ‹ě› is inserted to show that, indeed, an ‹e› can be pronounced. However, the ‹ě› does not appear between an affix that starts with a consonant while the preceding letter is a vowel.
 * 1) Excerpt: "...They should act towards one another..." --> "Dwaþryšěğam". The verb affix -ğam indicates the verb is in the middle voice (and the person is plural). For many, -š- and -ğ- together are not that hard to pronounce, but it makes it easier to have the option, which is where -ě- comes in.
 * To prevent epenthesis, the letter ‹ě› is placed between a confusing consonant cluster. It needs not be pronounced, however.

Orthography
Adwan, for the most part, is quite a phonemic language, though it does carry its own writing rules. Mainly everything is written as it is pronounced, and everything is pronounced as it is written. Diphthongs even have special diacritics that show they're diphthongs, because vowel clusters are separately pronounced. One thing Adwan does have, however, is gemination.

Gemination in Adwan can be quite tricky, for just because a consonant is doubled, doesn't mean it should be geminated. In the Polish loanwoard Ďďovnyca, or earthworm, the two ‹ď›'s are pronounced. However, in a situation like that, [ɟ] becomes [d͡ʒ].

Gemination is triggered by two things: double consonants, and an accute accent. It does not matter if pronunciation already falls on the vowel, an acute is added to the vowel before the double consonants to produce gemination. Thus, double consonants that are word initial are always pronounced.

Note: gemination occurs in the locative for the first declensions: Also, þ is never placed at the end of a word, instead, ð is used as it is devoiced in word final positions.
 * Afkra → Áffkrena / Áffkreňa
 * Šuska → Šússkena / Šússkeňa
 * Arebyna → Arevýnnena / Arevýnneňa

Cyrillic Orthography
Adwan is commonly used using both Latin and Cyrillic alphabets, usually with different fields, however. Though more common to see the latin alphabet used in contemporary uses, there are still many uses of the cyrillic alphabet, especially for important documents.

To learn more about the cyrillic orthography, view the article on Cyrillic Orthograpy in Adwan.

Voicing and Devoicing
While it is technically not present in Standard Adwan, it is common for voiced consonants to devoice before voiceless consonants, and for voiceless consonants to voice before voiced consonants. However, this is not mandatory, merely preferential. ===Palatalization ===

Palatalization in Adwan is tricky, as it is not shown in written speech whether a letter that precedes a ‹j› is to be palatalized or not. Vowels are never palatalized, as palatalization only ever happens to consonants. Most of the time, consonants are always palatalized if they precede a /j/. For example: In the word Skjorta (booth), the /k/ is palatalized to /kʲ/, which merges the sound of /k/ with /j/ to form one syllable. The /k/ in skjorta is palatalized because it precedes a /j/. It should be noted that /j/ doesn't palatalize consonants (technically, it would if it ended a word that has a penultimate letter as a consonant, by ‹j› never ends a word in Adwan), and in some dialects goes from /j/ to /ʝ/ (a stronger form of /j/). /J/ is only ever pronounced fully as /j/ when it begins a word. However, measures occur in Adwan that prevent palatalization with certain consonants. While /k/ can be palatalized, /n/ cannot, as /w/ and /l/ cannot either. ===Aspiration ===
 * C, č, ď, h, ch, l, ł, n, ň, r, š, t, w, z, ž, and ż cannot be palatalized.

Aspiration in Adwan isn't seen as much as Palatalization, or other phonetic mutations, though it is seen extensively in the second strong declension. Essentially, an aspirative consonant breaks diphthongs and vowels in to two. This process is used to indicate plural. Essentially, the vowel is split in half with an aspirative consonant, an ‹h›, in the middle. • Aì → Ahy (note, the "i" lengthens to a "y") • Eì → Ehy • Aù → Ahu • Eù → Ehu • Où → Ohu Etc. However, even single vowels have aspiration. • A → Aha • E → Ehe • O → Oho • U → Uhu • Y → Yhy And of course, there are irregular vowels. Note, only one irregular vowel actually goes through aspiration, while two other ones follow an equally odd form of palatalization. • I → Yje • Ö → Uho • Ü → Uje

Consonant Mutation
Consonants in Adwan tend to change, though not in the sense where they simple change to fit with pronunciation. Many times, the changes of consonants will happen in declensions, where the changing of a consonant signifies a change in number, though there are -- quite commonly, actually -- in common names, places and associations, consonant mutations. Most of the time, consonant mutations follow a set of phonetic rules that make sense, though there are still times where the changes are arbitrary. These irregular consonants are seldom, though they still exist in Adwan.

Example of regular consonant mutation:

In the genitive of the second weak declension, the singular declension of the noun mör (sea) becomes möres, though when changing to plural, -s becomes -z, therefore transforming möres to mörez.

In the ablative of the fourth weak declension, the singular declension of the noun chiðaùm (person) becomes chiðaùmysc, though when changing to plural, -sc change to šč, therefore leaving the word to be chiðaùmyšč.

There is no exact rule governing what consonants mutate to, though generally they become voiced if unvoiced, and become unvoiced it voiced; also, however, these rules may not be followed, as in some instances, s will become z, and in others, s will become š, and even þ.

Consonants also change in conjugations in Adwan to represent number. S becomes š, c becomes č, and z becomes ž in Adwanic verbs.
 * Łorac refers to the first person singular, while łorač refers to the first person plural.

Illegal Consonant Clusters
Adwan has a number of changes that go on when two consonant clusters that are considered illegal, occur. Consonant mutation occurs mainly in grammatical features, but it is not uncommon to see changes occur within a word because of consonant clusters (this usually occurs with affixes, mainly, and the occasional lenition of vulgar speech). Below is a list of mutations that occur when illegal consonant clusters are formed. Note, some clusters don't change to obviously. While some cluter changes are obvious, such as tč to þč, others go from being ts to c, which changes syllabic use rather than actual consonants.

Example of a word with a consonant change: Ðafšat + ča (air + characterization affix) = Ðafšaþča, not Ðafšatča. Another form of consonant mutation that occurs heavily in Adwan is "ellision", which changes illegal consonant clusters that deal with different words, rather than in one single word.

Ellision & Epenthesis
Ellision in Adwan is the loss of the final consonant of one word, and the initial consonant of another when they create illegal clusters. However, unlike many languages, the ellision that occurs in Adwan is follows by epenthesis, the process of inserting sounds so as to not lose other sounds. A very common place to see ellision and epenthesis happen is in subjunctive phrases, such as "I want that you bike to school...", which would be "Łorac saż syklusesc šússkena..." is commonly seen as a hard sentence to pronounce due to all the illegal consonants (s, c, and z never precede ż, etc). However, epenthesis inserts the epenthetic vowel "ě". This process of epenthesis requires the insertion of the phoneme and grapheme ‹ě› before the letters. For example, "Őveryš šesnúr..." would require an epenthetic vowel before the two double letters, therefore, it would be "Őveryš ě šesnúr."

Adjacent vowels don't go under epenthesis, but glottalization, instead.

===Ablaut ===

Abalut in Adwan is the mutation of vowels. Vowels in Adwan go through change, mainly to indicate number change. This is seen in demonstratives and noun declensions, where vowels change to change case and or number.

Ablaut is imperative to conjugations in Adwan, where, unlike noun and determiner inflections where the rule for ablaut is unspecified, nouns take a special person.
 * The nominative proximal demonstrative Þyd becomes Þud when becoming plural.
 * The distal demonstrative Jot goes through 6 ablauts, one for each case, therefore Jot changes to Jyt for the genitive, Jöt for the accusative, etc, etc.
 * A is associated with the first person, while u is to second person, y, e, and o are to third person (neuter, masculine and feminine, respectively), and i to fourth person indefinite.
 * 1) Možas refers to the first person, while možus refers to the second person.

===Nasalization ===

Nasalization is vital to Adwan, for it expresses a change in number in many declensions. For all of the first declension, vowels are nasalized to show the nouns being plural. The velar nasal consonant represents nasalization to vowels -- as it's only ever found near vowels -- ‹ň›, though many times the velar nasal is only merged with the vowel. • Afkra → Afkraň While a velar nasal is added to the word to pluralize, sometimes the velar nasal disappears in return for nasalization of the vowel. However, even if a velar nasal is still pronounced, vowels are still considered to go through nasalization due to the organized nasalization they all go through for number change.

Thus, with nasalization, afkraň, [afkraŋ] can become [afkrã].

===Gemination ===

Gemination occurs in Adwan mainly in case changes and names. Adwan doesn't geminate too many consonants, though it is exclusive to the locative first strong declension. However, there are specific rules. For a consonant to be geminated, the syllable before it must be stressed and represented with an acute -- or double accute -- accent.
 * Geminized: Ánna = [an:a]
 * Not-Geminized: Anna = [anna].

Note: A geminized ‹CH› does not repeat ‹ch›, but merely adds an ‹h› to it, therefore rock in Adwan, Káchha, would be Káchha, not Káchcha.

Glottalization
Glottalization in Adwan is neither phonemic nor is it a technical part of Adwanic speech. For the most part, glottalization of consonants and vowels in Adwan varies in many dialects; where many forme penthesis and elongate adjacent vowels, others cut them up and glottalize them.

However, there is one universal glottal rule that isn't shown in the orthography.

In prepositions such as s, þ and v, a glottal stop follows these consonants to stop them from completely joining the next word. It is common, however, to hear prepositions be glottalized.

Syntax & Morphology
Adwan is an inflecting language, where many words change their form depending on their function in a sentence. This may pose a problem for many English speakers, Chinese speakers, or other speakers of analytical languages, for analytical languages depend on word order to convey their meaning, as opposed to morphology.

Adwan, as an inflecting language, inflects verbs, nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and numbers depending on their function in a sentence, or their case (or person, mood, voice, tense and aspect, for verbs).

Word Order
Because of the inflections that go on in Adwan, word order is generally a lot freer than it would be if it didn't have all those inflections. Adwan generally follows an SVO word order, though many word orders are feasible depending on the mood or emphasis they want to put on the sentence. Many times, word order can change voice and mood to words without actually changing the mood or voice. In the OVS order, the verb should be in the passive voice, but because of the word order, the passive voice is not needed. It is, however, much more common and easier to follow a generic SVO order and use morphology to change meaning, rather than word order.

Place Manner Time
Place manner and time order is not strict at all in Adwan, except for one rule: time must always go after the verb. The usual order in Adwan is time place manner, although quite literally, there is no restriction to order, as long as the time goes after the verb. When dealing with Place manner time, the verb always precedes the temporal phrase, therefore word order depends on the position of the temporal phrase.

Time Place Manner Time Manner Place Place Manner Time Place Time Manner Manner Time Place Manner Place Time Tareì (Ta + reì) -> I will go; mač --> tomorrow; šússkena (loc of šuska) --> (to, at) school; ła --> at (by way of, via in the ablative), etc; swačeì (abl of swača) --> car.
 * I will go tomorrow to school by car.
 * Tareì mač šússkena ła swačeì.
 * I will go tomorrow by car to school.
 * Tareì mač ła swačeì šússkena.
 * To school by car I will go tomorrow.
 * Šússkena ła swačeì tareì mač.
 * To school I will go tomorrow by car.
 * Šússkena tareì mač ła swačeì.
 * By car I will go tomorrow to school.
 * Ła swačeì tareì mač šússkena.
 * By car to school I will go tomorrow.
 * Ła swačeì šússkena tareì mač.

Cases
Adwan has seven cases to which decline its nouns, adjectives, pronouns, numbers and determiners. They are the nominative, the genitive, the accusative, the dative, the ablative, the locative and the vocative.

The Nominative and the Accusative are subject-object cases. No prepositions govern either case; the verb distinguishes the subject and the direct object; in the phrase Paul eats apples, "Paul" is in the nominative, and "apples" is in the accusative. Nothing ever stands in the way between a nominative and an accusative case, other than the verb, theoretically. However, in most languages, predicates are considered to be in the Nominative. However, in Adwan, predicates are in the accusative, so in a sentence like Paùl is big, big would be declined to the accusative.

The Genitive case is the case of posession and relation. Since Adwan's ratio of adjectives is low compared to its nouns and verbs, many nouns act as adjectives when used in the genitive. In the phrase The dog house, when compound word usage is not preferred, the genitive case is used, in which the phrase would then mean The house of dogs, in which "dogs" would be in the genitive. the genitive is ideally the "of" case; posessors always follow the nouns, rather than the nouns following their posessors like in other languages. In the girl's cat, the girl is the posessor and comes before the cat; however, in Adwan, the girl comes after the cat, because a possessive noun is like saying "of [a/the]". Therefore, the girl's cat would be the cat of the girl.

The Dative, Ablative and the Locative cases are prepositional cases in Adwan; these are the three cases which are governed by prepositions. Many prepositions in Adwan have up to three distinct meanings, each attached to a certain case; this is where these cases come in. Many prepositions may have different uses but are all coupled to one preposition; it is up to the case of a noun to determine which menaing is used. While somewhat confusing, cases are solely dependant on prepositions, so knowing what preposition goes to what meaning will distinguish its case. The Vocative case refers to a dialogue case, used when addressing someone in specific. It is the least complicated of the cases, and only ever used in day to day dialogue, rather than writing (though it does occur a lot in writing with dialogues). In the phrase Hey, Paul!, "Paul" is in the vocative, because it is being adressed.
 * The Dative case ususally refers to an indirect recipant of an action.
 * The Ablative case usually refers to the causative noun and the noun of instrument.
 * The Locative case ususally refers to locational and directional nouns.

Prepositions
Prepositions in Adwan can be quite tricky, for not only are there a good number of them, but many of them are incredibly dependant on cases. A preposition can have up to three different meanings, some even more; the distinction between each meaning lies in the case used, however.

For example: the preposition After, or Ďeňkwy, means After in the ablative, and behind in the locative. While a connection between the two can be made, there are still even more ambigious prepositions, such as the preposition for on, or ch, which refers to a general point in time in the dative, refers to a general idea in the ablative, and suggests an item locationally being on something in the locative.

Thus, it is vital to know which case goes with not only which prepositions, but with which prepositional meanings.

Note on pronunciation: although unmarked, all prepositions with one syllable -- or only one letter, mainly those consisting of only one consonant -- are usually, in usual and formal speech, followed by a glottal stop. If the previous phoneme is the same as the preposition, the preposition is separately pronounced, usually with another glottal stop in between said phonemes, such as ...þyð þ... which can cause some problems.

Second note: To search for a specific English preposition to see where it belongs, simply use ctrl+f (or command+f) and search for the preposition. At the end of this section is also a table which helps navigate through cases and prepositions.
 * About - Ðö
 * 1) Dative: Used when referring to a temporal phrase, such as I sleep from dawn to dusk. Analygous to until.
 * 2) Ablative: Used when describing or referring to something, such as This book is about...
 * 3) Locative: Used when wondering about, analygous to around, such as I've been wandering about/around...
 * After - Ďeňkwy
 * 1) Ablative: Used when referring to events mainly, such as I walk after dinner.
 * 2) Locative: Used when reffering to position, analygous to behind, such as She's after/behind him in line...
 * Against - Seď
 * 1) Dative: Used when in opposition to something. Also Versus and In opposition to.
 * 2) Ablative: Used when an action was done in spite of something, such as I break the rules despite my parents' wishes.
 * 3) Locative: Used when something is right across from something, such as My house is right across from your house.
 * At - (there is no preposition for the meanings given below, for a case without a particular preposition will take these meanings by default)
 * 1) Dative: Used when referring to an action that was directed towards something, such as I gave the ball to...
 * 2) Ablative: Refers to something being the cause of something, such as This present is from..., etc.
 * 3) Locative: Refers to a location, analygous to a locational to, such as I'm at school or I'm going to school.
 * At the cause of - Oďy
 * 1) Dative: Used when referring to the temporal usage of time, such as Twelve years ago, I went... analygous to ago. Note: this is used prepositionally, rather than postpositionally, therefore it would be Ago three years, rather than Three years ago.
 * 2) Ablative: Refers to the cause of something, analygous to because of, such as Because of you, I'm in trouble now.
 * 3) Locative: Refers to the location outside of something, such as I'm outside of your house.
 * Before - Jeg
 * 1) Dative: Used when referring to a temporal phrase, such as I sleep from dawn to dusk. Analygous to until. Preposition required.
 * 2) Ablative: Refers to temporal usages, such as Before school, I go jogging.
 * 3) Locative: Refers to a location being before or in front of something, such as I am standing before/in front of your house.
 * Between - Þ
 * 1) Dative: Refers to being in a situation, such as I'm in the middle of a dilema. (Worded I-am between dilema)
 * 2) Ablative: Refers to a situation between a group, such as This is a secret between us, analygous to among.
 * 3) Locative: Refers to a location in between two things, such as My book case is in between my tv and my wall.


 * For - Y


 * 1) Dative: Refers to an indirect object at which something is the cause for, such as I bought this for my mother.
 * 2) Ablative: Refers to a reference point in time, such as I've been sick since December!
 * From - S
 * 1) Ablative: Used when referring to a creator of an object, such as This book was written by...
 * 2) Locative: Refers to a location being the initial location or a destination, such as I'm going from Prague to London, or I'm from Paris. If in the locative, it always uses the preposition.
 * In - V
 * 1) Dative: Used when referring something for a cause, such as I put all my effort into this organization. Also used when referring to a temporal phrase, ususally using until, etc.
 * 2) Ablative: Used when referring to non-locational uses, such as In a spirit of brotherhood.
 * 3) Locative: Used when referring to locational uses, analygous to inside, such as My house is in my neighborhood. When used with certain verbs, it also means into.
 * On - Ch
 * 1) Dative: Used when referring to a time period, such as On monday, I'm going to, or At three o'clock...
 * 2) Ablative: Used when referring to an oncoming action, such as Pools are closed during the winter. Analygous to during.
 * 3) Locative: Used when referring to a location on something, such as I set the book on the table.
 * Over - Chu
 * 1) Locative: Used when referring to an item over something, analygous to above, such as The dog jumped over the fox or The lights are above our heads.
 * Under - Och
 * 1) Locative: Used when referring to a location or a direction under something, analogous to beneath, such as I walked under the bridge.
 * With - Zuð
 * 1) Dative: Refers to an inclusion, including is analygous, such as Everyone won, including her.
 * 2) Ablative: Refers to an item of instrument, such as I drive with a car. Also means by way of, or via.
 * 3) Locative: Used when referring to an object that is near another object, such as The store is by/near my house. Analygous to near.
 * Without - Sað
 * 1) Dative: Refers to an exception, or a lack of inclusion, except is analygous, such as Everyone lost except for her.
 * 2) Ablative: Refers to lack of instrument or item, such as I won without any help!
 * 3) Locative: Used when referring to an object that is far from another object, such as The mall is far from my house! Analygous to far.

Prepositions and their Cases Table
Below is a table showing an overview of the Adwanic and English prepositions and the cases they belong to.

Declensions: Nouns & Adjectives
Nouns, Adjectives, and Numbers, for the most part, follow the same declensions, more or less. Other than irregular nouns, and adjectives, every declinable part of speech (except for many pronouns!) follow the same declensions.

Note: Gender does now specifically own a declension, but rather has a special affix that changes gender; adding -š or -eš will make a noun masculine, while adding -č or -oč will make the noun feminine. All nouns come in neuter form, except for slang terms and informal terms that are gender specific. While nouns can technically be declined into gender, it must be known that inanimate nouns can NOT be declined for gender, for it is culturally sexist and incorrect. Šlyna can be šlynač or šlynaš, since it means child, and a child can be generally unspecified, masculine or feminine. Parm, however, cannot be correctly declined to parmeš or parmoč, for a road cannot be feminine or masculine (note, feminine and masculine declensions are still given for said noun, but they are only for demonstration.)

More on Gender...
Adwan indeed does decline to gender -- three genders, as a matter of face; Masculine, Feminine and Neuter. However, gender in Adwan is anything but arbitrary. All nouns in Adwan are by default neuter. All inanimate nouns can only be neuter, while animate nouns can have all three genders. A noun is only declined as a feminine noun if the noun is literally a woman, or carries an essence of feminism; same for the masculine nouns.

Examples of nouns that under go masculine and feminine declensions are nouns such as:


 * Šlyna, "child"; can be šlynaš, "boy", or šlynač, "girl".
 * Fevna, "parent"; can be fevnaš, "father", or fevnač, "mother".
 * Martyn, "fox"; can be martyneš, "male fox", or martynoč, "female fox".

To change a noun's gender, a gender prefix must be added to the already-declined noun.

Masculine: -š, or -eš Feminine: -č, or -oč

Apart from Gender, Adwan also declines its nouns according to number. The number system in Adwan is quite simple, as things are declined as to whether they're singular, or plural. Singular denotes the amount being of only one quantity, while plural denotes it to be of more than one quantity.

Noun or Adjective?
Adwan doesn't have separate declensions for adjectives, like some languages such as Czech and Polish, but rather, an adjective is declined as if it would be a noun, and vice versa. With this, many adjectives can act as nouns if they were to be standalone parts of speeches, for example: délla could mean either "good" or "the good". However, there are adjectives that are purely predicates and therefore cannot stand as nouns, such as the adjective featured, as opposed to its noun counterpart, feature. While word order is not specifically important in Adwan, context is, as one cannot simply see "Šöne", which means "old" and think it to be the noun "old thing" or the adjective "old".

Due to case inflections, adjectives have no exact positioning in Adwan, though it is preferred that adjectives follow the nouns; therefore, in a phrase like the red apple, the phrasing would be reworded to be the apple red. However, as stated, word order is not too strict and only follows these rules for convenience.

Adjective Placement
Adjectives in Adwan follow a funny rule. While nouns that are modified by a single adjective typically follow a rule where the adjective follows the noun, when two adjectives describe the noun, the rules change up a bit. In Adwan, two adjectives surround the noun, rather than precede or succede it, therefore, saying the big red apple in Adwan would be worded like the big apple red, or the red apple big. This only happens typically with two adjectives, as when more come, they start piling after the noun (i.e. the big, red, round apple would be the big apple red round, etc). However, in literature and other pieces of writing that merit class and sophistiction, adjectives are distributed evenly between each sides, therefore the big, red, shiny, round apple would be worded the big, red apple, shiny, round; thanks to the inflectional system in Adwan, the listener and reader will always know which noun each adjective describes.

It is also not uncommon to see all adjectives pile up together in a certain position of a sentence, ususally the end, though this is mainly a specific style of writing used in rhetorical pieces, poems, and other literary works, used as literary and rhetorical devices. This usage is only limited to sentences where there is only one lexical item per case, rather than a complex sentence which contains many instances of one case.


 * English: The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy red dog.

Adwan: Martyn rompysje chu pőžac moùl kad chrulac łoši.

Literal: Fox jumped over dog fast brown red lazy.

This order is not uncommon, but not common amongst general, everyday speech which follows the typical adjective rules of following the noun and piling around the noun.

Affixes
Nouns and Adjectives in Adwan carry a number of derivational morpheme markers that add or change meaning. Like many affixes in other languages, they slightly add on to the meaning of a noun. For example, the affix -čna means in essence of, very much like the affix -ness in English. However, many affixes in English all go back to this same affix in Adwan. In the English word Brotherhood, the affix -hood has the same meaning as -ness; in Adwan, to say brotherhood, one would say brother, or povla (note, brother is an irregular noun that does not follow the same gender pattern as most nouns) and add on the affix, leaving it to be povlačna, or brotherness. Affixes are added on to the undeclined noun, for the noun is declined after the affix has been added on.'''

Below is a list of affixes -- mostly suffixes -- used to alter meaning in Adwan. Note: do not confuse derivational affixes with diminutives and augmentives.

Note, gemination does NOT occur with affixes. Double consonants are both pronounced. Adjective comparisons function by use of prefixes, which are also shown below.

Declensions
In Adwan, mainly every regular part of speech follows either a strong declension, or a weak declension. Some pronouns -- such as personal pronouns and interrogative/relative pronouns -- and all demonstratives don't follow these declensions. Nouns in Adwan are not categorized for gender, but on its letter class and the strength of its declension. Nouns ending in consonants will mainly go to the weak declensions (except for nouns ending in -és, -éż, and -ér), and al nouns ending in vowels will belong to strong declensions.

Strong Declensions
Strong declensions consist of nouns, adjectives and other parts of speech that are declined that end in vowels or go through a system of ablaut to decline. Adwan only has three strong declensions, but parts of speech in the first and second strong declensions are the most abundant parts of speech in Adwan.

First Declension
Šlyna = Child;
 * Note: Look at the "Orthography" and read on Gemination for an explanation on the locative.

Second Declension
Bre = Adult

Third Declension
The first declension deals with words that end in -és, -ér, and -éż. Motér = Strange

Weak Declensions
Declensions shown below mainly consist of suffixes and infixes.

First Declension
The first declension deals with all nouns ending in -ch, -g, -n, -s, and -z. Feaz = Tourist

Second Declension
The second declension deals with all nouns ending in -ď, -l, -r, -v, and -ž. Maìr = Mayor

Third Declension
The third declension deals with all nouns ending in -c, -ð, -t, and -ż. Kaùleð = Hiker

Fourth Declension
The fifth declension deals with all nouns ending in -d, -ğ, and -m. Note, distinction between number for nouns in the fourth declension has collapsed in nearly all cases. Tordaf = Road

Personal Pronouns
Because of the use of genitives, posessive adjectives don't exist in Adwan.

Relative Pronouns
Relative pronouns in Adwan, like pronouns, are irregularly declined. They decline for case only, and follow a rather regular pattern (though the declensions in themselves are quite irregular as they don't follow the regular patterns).

Adwan has one relative pronoun, and its declination works something like the French relative pronouns of qui and que, and Latin's declension, where it declines according to its part of speech function rather than the noun its connecting or relating to. The relative pronoun in Adwan is Sað, and it has all the functions of English's relative pronouns that, which, who, whom, etc.

Interrogative Pronouns
Interrogative pronouns pose questions while taking form of what would be nouns. However, most words that do pose questions are actually reversed adverbs, where rather than going after the verb, the precede the verb. Adwan's structure does not depend wholly on this, however, as simply using intonation is enough to pose a question.

Adwan has rather odd interrogative pronouns, that, although not found in English typically, can be found in other languages. However, like other Indo-European languages, what is identical to the relative that in Adwan.

All Adwanic interrogative pronouns end in að and follow the same declension pattern as sað.

How: Łað

How many: Gwað

What: Sað

What kind: Flað

Where: Chað

When: Vað

Who: Tað

Why: Ďað

Demonstratives
Demonstratives, words such as this, that, those, these, etc, make a three way distinction in Adwan, rather than the two way distinction found in English. Adwan makes a distinction between distal, medial and proximal demonstratives.
 * 1) Proximal demonstratives mark objects that are near to the speaker. The equivalent to this in English is the demonstrative this and these.
 * 2) Medial demonstratives mark the objects that are near to the addressee. English doesn't necessarily make a distinction for this type of demonstrative, but that and those are usually used to refer to objects near the addressee.
 * 3) Distal demonstratives mark objects that are far from both the speaker and the addressee. English has the demonstratives that and those, and archaically had yon and yonder, but those aren't used as much anymore.

Demonstratives in Adwan are declined for number and case, although the declensions they go through are, typically, irregular and don't follow the rules of typical declensions.

Proximal: Þyd - This
Þyd, the proximal demonstrative in Adwan, marks objects that are close to the speaker. It is the equivalent to this and these in English.

Medial: Lal
Lal, the medial demonstrative in Adwan, marks objects that are close to the addressee. It has no equivalence in English. It does, however, match along nicely with the Spanish medial demonstrative ese/esa/eso.

Distal: Jot - That
Jot, the distal demonstrative in Adwan, marks objects that are far from both speaker and addressee. It is the equivalent to that and those in English.

Numbers
Numbers in Adwan are quite simple and consistent. They utilize an easy set of affixes that change with each place. Adwan only provides numbers from 0-9, with the rest using affixes to change numbers.

Verbs
Verbs in Adwan are the most complex part of speech in Adwan due to their agglutinative nature. Rather than change endings to change mood, tense, aspect, person and number, Adwan employs a number of affixes to change such things. The only thing resembling fusional conjugation in verbs are the conjugations per person, which change per conjugation.

Adwan has three conjugations; verbs ending in -an, verbs ending in -en, and verbs ending in -on.

On a side note, if every voice was compatible with every mood, aspect and tense and person, there would be 432 (excluding polarity and other verb form affixes) different forms of one verb, according to this formula:

t = 12, a = 3t, m = 3a, v = 4m, 4v = 432.

Person
Adwan conjugates to 4 persons, with the 3rd person having an additional 3 genders, thus having a total of 6 persons total. Below is a table for the conjugation for each type of verb and for each person. NOTE: The nominative pronoun is NEVER used in general sentences, as the person is conjugated right into the verb. The nominative pronoun, however, does double as an oblique case, and, when used with a general pause and a comma, does not come off as redundant. Nominative pronouns are only used in oblique usages and when to emphasize certain things.

In Adwan, the first step (and probably only step depending on the context) of conjugating a verb is conjugating it for its person. In Adwan, rather than changing verb endings for each tense, aspect, voice and mood, affixes are added to the conjugated verb.

Tense & Aspect
Tense and Aspect come off as merged in Adwan, for there is no separate affix for each tense and each aspect, but rather, the combination of Tense and Aspect produce one affix (past perfective has the affix -je-, while the past imperfective has the affix -eży-).

Adwan is a language rich with tense and aspect. There are three tenses (past, present and future), and three aspects (perfective, perfect, and imperfective). Tense alone, however, is not enough to express what is going with the actions, therefore, Aspects are employed (and merged with tenses) to change the aspect of the verb. Compare ate with had eaten, etc. Below is a table with the respective affixes for each combination. NOTE: -Ø- means no affix is added.

Mood
Verbs in Adwan conjugate to mood, apart from aspect, tense and person. The conjugation of moods themselves is not hard, but rather knowing when to use them. Adwan has four moods: the indicative, the subjunctive, the imperative, and the conditional. To see how to negate a verb, look at Polarity. Like Tense/Aspect, Mood in Adwan is expressed by the use of affixes. Interestingly enough, the affix used to indicate mood on a verb changes on whether the subject of the noun is singular or plural. Below is a table with the respective affixes for moods, along with examples in both English and Adwan. Vowels in parenthesis are only added if the previous affix ends in a consonant. Notes: On the conditional, the auxilliary verb in English "could" and "can" works as a prefix to verbs, "pöž(i)". Can is inferred when the verb is in the indicative, or the imperative, while could is inferred when the verb is in the subjunctive. Also notice that the mood affixes have to agree with number of the subject.

Voice
Voice is an important part to Adwan's verbs, for each voice carries a great amount of information depending on its usage. Adwanic verbs are able to be conjugated to three different voices; the Active, the Passive, and the Middle. Like other grammatical functions in a verb, Voice is distinguished by the use of affixes. With that said, the affix used depends on the number of the subject. Below is a table with the rightful affix needed to express the voice, along with a translation in English and Adwan.

Polarity
Polarity in Adwan describes whether the verb is negative or not. Adwan has three different polarities: negative, affirmative, and negative-affirmative.

Negative negates the noun. This is seen in English by the usage of do not, or don't. In archaic English, the negative particle not is placed after the verb, too.

Affirmative strengthens the noun. English has a particle for affirmation, though it differs slightly from Adwan's affirmative. In English, the particle do is English's form of affirmation. However, affirmation in Adwan is more like saying I certainly eat, rather than I do eat.

Negative-Affirmative negates an affirmation. English doesn't have regular use of this, though the phrasing of certainly don't fits the context quite well.

Unlike other parts to a verb, polarity is expressed in suffixes, therefore polarity affixes must ALWAYS go to the end of a verb. In addition, verbs with no specified polarity don't require a polarity aspect; verbs such as I eat, I watch, I go to..., etc, don't require polarity unless negating, affirming, or negating an affirmation for it.

Modality
Modality in Adwan is expressed by the use of prefixes in Adwan, rather than by the use of modal or auxilliary verbs. While a single affix is given for certain types of modalities -- which will be reffered to in English for ease -- the use of each affix can change with the differentiation of each verb mood.

Should/Shall
The technical use of should and shall in Adwan is expressed by the verb prefix dwa, or dwað, depending if the verb begins with a vowel or not.

When a verb is in the indicative, the modality from dwa is equivalent to that of should, however, when in the imperative, the modality changes to that of shall, and although these are merely tense changes in English, these changes are merely additions to voice.
 * Dwaþryš v tyrtaì povlačny -- they should act in a spirit of brotherhood.
 * Dwaþryšěty v tyrtaì povlačny -- they shall act in a spirit of brotherhood.

Can/Could/Might
The use of can and could also depends on the mood of the verb. The prefix pöžě is attached to the verb. Unlike dwa, which changes form depending on the verb's beggining, pöžě has the optional e, therefore usable with any verb.

When a verb is in the indicative, imperative, and the subjunctive, the prefix is equivalent to that of can, and when in the subjunctive, it is to that of could.

One phenomenon is that can can be used with the subjunctive, which, although not uncommon, is unheard of in English using the modal verbs, instead then using to be able to. It literally says I-want that-acc can-you-eat-subjunctive, or I want that able you eat.
 * I want that you be able to eat --> Łorac saż pöžěmožusesc.

In the Imperative and in the Indicative, pöžě also refers to can. However, in the Imperative, the meaning is a little different.
 * Pöžěmožus? --> Can you eat?
 * Pöžěmožusěty! --> You can eat!

The imperative with pöžě poses a command with a form a formality. Like in English where one might say You may all eat now, rather than saying Eat now!, the imperative with pöžě poses the same form of formality.

In the conditional, pöžě changes from can to could. Pöžě + the conditional relies heavily on aspect and tense, unlike pöžě + indicative/subjunctive/imperative.
 * Pöžěmožusěðe --> You could eat.
 * Pöžěmožuseďěðe --> You could have eaten.

Note, the future conditional + pöžě forms might, rather than ''could. ''

Infinitive
The infinitive marks an uninflected verb. Infinitives are always given in dictionaries, and in Adwan, they end in -an, -en, and -on. Infinitives are much less common in Adwan than they are in many language, mainly due to lack of usage of personal pronouns and usage of compact, agglutinative affixes to express verb functions.

For example: We should eat, "eat" is in the inifnitive in English, Spanish, and even French. However, in Adwan, the verb is conjugated with the modality and person, leaving we should eat to be dwamožus. Another form of the infinitive seen in many language is the Supine, which is discussed below.
 * Debemos comer.
 * Nous devrions manger.

Supine
The supine in Adwan is distinct from the Supine in many languages, just in the fact that it doesn't utilize the infinitive. In Adwan, the supine is formed by adding the prefix Ďy if the verb starts with a consonant, and Ďyk if it starts with a vowel.

The supine is the verbal form used in a noun phrase. In English, it is formed by using the particle "to" which forms the inifnitive.

In the phrase I want to go home to sleep, sleep is in the supine. The supine forms a verb that acts as the cause for the previous verb.

Below, the supine is bolded, to help get a stronger understanding of the supine. Spanish puts the preposition a or para, while French puts pour before the infinitive verbs.
 * I walk outside to run.
 * I go to school to learn.
 * I sleep to rest.

Essentially, the supine is like saying So i can..., though it is not limited to person. Verbs in the supine are still conjugated for person, which indicates the person in the so i can... translation.

Gerund
In Adwan, the use of a gerund is actually quite rare, only used in certain subordinate clauses and such. The typical gerund is simply formed by using the prefix Na, and Nan if the verb starts with a noun. Usually, the gerundive is a noun-like form of the verb, where the actual activity of doing the verb is treated like a noun.

Note: with a gerundive, the verb is NOT to be conjugated.

English makes extensive use of the gerund which are incorrect in Adwan.
 * I am swimming --> Það naščoran is wrong.


 * 1) Verbs are completely independant. There is no such thing as a helping verb, or an auxilliary verb in Adwan.

However, there are some times when the Gerundive in English and Adwan are used in the same format.
 * 1) Technically, this phrase says that you are swimming, in the manner that the activity of swimming consists of you, rather than you being in the process of swimming. To use verbs in this aspect, the imperfective is used. Apart from the general idea being incorrect, verbs in the gerunds also have to be declined (note, all verbs in the gerund follow the fourth declension, for they all end in -n). 
 * After swimming, I went home. --> Ďeňkwy naščoranak, taje vjóšškena za.
 * 1) Technically, says "After swimming, I went to my house.
 * 2) The usage of this phrase is correct, for it treats the verb like a noun.

Irregular Verbs
To see the irregular verbs in Adwan, along with conjugations, view the Irregular Verbs article.

Adverbs
Adverbs in Adwan are not declined. They have no specific ending, although many of them may share suffixes which are used to use adjectives as adverbs.

However, one thing that does restrict adverbs is their placement. While nouns and adjectives don't have specific placement rules, adverbs must ALWAYS follow the part of speech they describe, which is, in most cases, the verb.

For example:
 * She ate a very big meal --> She ate a big very meal.
 * She gracefully fell from her bicycle --> She fell gracefully from her bicycle.

Tag Question Particle
A trait shared by many languages, Adwan also features the use of an interrogative particle. Not exactly asking where, when, or why, the interrogative particle acts much like the French particle est-ce, the Polish czy, and the English particle do; it poses a yes or no question.

The particle, Je, is usually introduced at the beggining or at the end of the question. Traditionally, it's quite common the the subject pronoun to also be added for emphasis and to even out the tag question particle, however, this only happens if the particle is introduced at the beggining of the sentence. However, the particle indeed can be negated. Rather than negating the verb, Adwan negates the particle to pose a question with a predisposed doubt.
 * Łoruc pycu, je? = Do you want pizza?
 * Je ğu þaùrus łachav za? = Do you like my music?

Note the use of posessive adjectives rather than genitive personal pronouns. Usually, if a tag question particle is used, a sense of informality is established, which means that posessive adjectives are more accepted than the slightly formal genitive pronouns.
 * Jeta ğu þaùrus afkruň neìcynuň za? = Do you not like my apples and oranges?

Conjunctions
Conjunctions in Adwan are famous for being odd, especially the Coordinating Conjunctions.

Coordinating Conjunctions
Coordinating Conjunctions are quite odd, as they work in a rather agglutinative form. Coordinating conjunctions have two forms: one form for clauses, and one form for items. A coordinating conjunction used with clauses is usually a conjunction that connects two sentences together; however, the item conjunctions are simply conjunctions used for items as they are listed or used in such manner.

While coordinating conjunctions working with clauses use regular, traditional conjunctions, coordinating conjunctions working with items use proclitics, which are morphemes that function like prefixes, but have their own grammatical meaning (comparable to that of -que in Latin). Note: the Clause form of the coordinating conjunction "so" is identical to the subordinating conjunction for "so that".

Phrasing
Although grammar is crucial to Adwan, there is still the great question of how to put things together. Below is a quick guide on telling time, telling the weather, etc, etc.

Weather
In many languages, when describing the weather, they simply use the third person singular, and if they are not pro-dropping, they use dummy pronouns. The rules in Adwan are slightly different. In English and French, the dummy pronoun it and il are used to indicate an indefinite noun, usually the weather in context. However, Adwan is slightly different. Rather than not specifying anything at all, Adwan explicitly states what's doing what, therefore to express that it's raining outside, something must take up the subject. In Adwan, everything is referred to using "day" in the general mood, therefore It rains would be The day rains.

The usage of this extend to places, too:
 * It is raining in Rome
 * Žol v Rómmena ďovyser, which literally says Day in Rome is raining.

Existential Clauses
The usage of the pronoun "there" and "y" in English and French are the subjects for existential clauses in those languages. Along with the verb "to be" and "to have", an existential clause is formed, looking something like there is a dog in my house, or il y a un chien chez moi. However, Adwan exist is much more specific in the placing of the existential object. The verb Łyðan, or "to Exist" is used, followed by the place. General statements with specified location uses the noun poùl, or, which roughly -- but not directly -- translates to "else-where/some-where". Note, it is incredibly common, however, to not only drop poùl, but the replaced "exist" with "to be". Because Adwan's declension rules lead predicates to be in the accusative, however, the most common -- and still grammatically correct -- form of expressing existential clauses is simply to have the subject just be.
 * There is a dog in front of my house.
 * Pőž łyðyser jeg šússkena za, which literally says Dog is existing before my house.
 * There are dogs and cats!
 * Poùlac, pőžet neìmywaň łyðyš!, which literally says (At) Elsewhere, dogs and cats exist.
 * There are dogs and cats!
 * Pőžet neìmywaň þyla! literally translates to Dogs and cats are!