Serqar

Phonology
The language has a mostly regular phonology. The language features aspiration, commonly after vowels.

Alphabet (IPA)
The alphabet is the standard modern ISO latin alphabet on 26 letters.

A/a - /a/

B/b - /b/

C/c - /k/

D/d - /d/

E/e - /e/

F/f - /f/

G/g - /g/

H/h - /h/

I/i - /i/

J/j - /j/

K/k - /k/

L/l - /k/

M/m - /m/

N/n - /n/

O/o - /o/

P/p - /p/

Q/q - /k/

R/r - /ɾ/

S/s - /s/

T/t - /tʰ/

U/u - /u/

V/v - /v/

W/w - /v/

X/x - /ks/ - {only used in loanwords}

Y/y - /y/

Z/z - /z/

The language also use the six vowels with diacritics, mainly to distinguish the same words from each other.

The vowels use the trema diacritic - ä, ë, ï, ö, ü, ÿ

They get different sounds from them:

ä - /æ/

ë - /ɛ/

ï - /ɨ/

ö - /œ/

ü - /ʌ/

ÿ - /ø/

Dipthongs
vg - /v/

ott - /ʌ/

uo - /u:/

íy or iy - /jy/

kc - /k/

ae - /a:/

rw - /ʕ/

Stress
Stress is unpredictable like in English or Italian, but the word that has stress has it on the penult (the second from last) letter.

Nouns
The nominative case is used on the direct or indirect subject of an intransitive verb.

The accusative case is used on the direct or indirect subject of a transitive verb.

The instrumental case takes the place of the english preposition with 

The oblique case is used on the object of a word.

Moods
The verbs are marked for tense and mood at the same time. The mood marking is put at the root first (for example ge-le-pol; -le is mood and -pol is tense).

Apart from these conjugations, some auxilary verbs, namely be, have, want and do change completely according to the gender of the subject in a sentence:

Be:

Common - gon

Neuter - qe

Masculine - gof

Feminine - vge

Have:

Common - repy

Neuter - hehy

Masculine - hae

Feminine - rwae

Want:

Common - zo

Neuter - reriyn

Masculine - se

Feminine - jerwy

Do:

Common - qude

Neuter - zë

Masculine - base

Feminine - juvym

Numbers
1 - Ska

2 - Po

3 - Su

4 - Di

5 - Godo

6 - Ryf

7 - Ijusu

8 - Kepe

9 - Lottpi

10 - Pito

11 - Acag

12 - Toup

13 - Supito

14 - Dipito

15 - Glopito

16 - Rypito

17 - Ijupito

18 - Klépito

19 - Lottpito

20 - Luduty

30 - Ykasa

40 - Kakolo

50 - Gyka

60 - Daufa

70 - Memepui

80 - Peduno

90 - Hepali

100 - Slusu

101 - Skraaslusu

200 - Proslusu

201 - Skraaproslusu

Word order
The standard word order in Serqar is Verb-Subject-Object (VSO). Adjectives and adverbs precede the noun, prepositions follow the noun. Pronouns can be suited as the subject which follow the verb. Conjunctions/particles precede the noun or adjective if it is present.

Comma
A phrase is divided into two by a comma. The comma can be set when one verb and two nouns are present.

Appositional phrase
An appositional phrase (for example Bob, my annoying neighbor, is short) changes the word order too. If the word order was normal, it would be Bob, neighbor annoying my, short is, but in Serqar, the word order change to SOV. For example: Bob, my annoying neighbor, is short.

Asking a question
When asking a question, the word order is changed to OSV. For example:

ATE-SAM-ORANGES (VSO)

OSV would change it to:

ORANGES-SAM-ATE?

The tone of voice does not change when asking a question.

Vocabulary
Most commonly occuring word pattern:

CVCVC

Nasal consonants are mostly at the end of words. F, which isn't a nasal, also only appear at end of words.

Pronouns
I/me - kype

He - cy

She - si

It - zevo

Me - gon

You - ken

Both - qykef

Us - pige

They - diy

Basic phrases
Thank you - Ry ken

You're welcome - Gon powiyf ken

Yes - Rwe

No - Hef

I don't understand - Guogiym jaehen kype

How many? - Tin suocu

Please speak English - Ríykcuof Enlaez qykef

What? - Retyn?

Fire! - Raeke!

I'm a tourist - Ho pyzuon kype

It costs about 200 American dollars - Recemal zevo Ameriykaen Dollare 200

Example texts
(to come)