Natraden

Natraden is an agglunative, engineered language that I somewhat developed when bored one night. Though others may not agree, I'm quite satisfied with the way it turned out. The flag to the right is me trying to design one in 5 minutes. I have tried to put a lot of logic into the grammar as well as deriving words from other languages. Enjoy! (or whatever you do with languages as poorly developed as mine)



Welcome!
'''Etxëlōdiw! Iw sæte dat Uj forwāte ggiwzi. Uj Equilibrioj gehåren obrigo mit Lerk.'''

'Welcome! I see that you continued. Anyway, have fun learning!'

''Welcome! I see that you forward gone. [You] fun have anyway learning.''

Alphabet and Phonetics
This is where the nightmare begins. Along with the full english alphabet, Natraden contains 19 other accented letters. Some will make sense, others not so much.

Phonetic Rules

 * When a W terminates a word, it makes the IPA sound f
 * ​Anaglipw (Anaglyph) /anaglipf/
 * This doesn't apply to some words
 * Iwen (We) /ifɛn/
 * If the root word ends in w
 * ​Anaglipwex (Anaglyphs) /anaglipfɛks/
 * ​When R proceeds an unaccented vowel in the same syllable, it makes the IPA sound w
 * ​Ar (She) /aw/
 * Wur (Who) /vuɒ/
 * Ińlandere (English) /iŋlandɛɾɛ/    <-- Wrong
 * When Y proceeds a vowel, weird things can happen:
 * AY /ɛä/
 * EY /ɛä/
 * IY /iä/
 * OY /wä/
 * UY /uä/

Case Marking
Word order in Natraden is Subject-Object-Verb. Therefore, we need a way to distinguish between the subject and object, especially in sitations where there is only the object (the verb acts intransitive).

There are 6 cases in Natraden. Nominative, Accusative, Dative, Genetive, Vocative and Instrumental.

In this example, we will be using the word for World: Planeta.

Word Order
SOV is just a summarisation of the entire word order. Any nouns basically come before the verb unless the noun is preceded by a preposition. The entire worder is as follows, anything in square brackets are optional:
 * Subject
 * Object
 * Indirect Object
 * Instrument
 * [Auxiliary] Verb
 * Adverb
 * Preposition [+ Indirect Object]
 * Other Information (Like Time; In any Order)
 * Seperable Part of Seperable Verb
 * Participle
 * Infinitive (if Auxiliary verb is used)

Verb Conjugation
Verbs don't conjugate like in other langauges, and also unlike other languages, every verb is regular. All verbs end in llé and are required to be replaced in order to conjuagte. If the mood of the verb is changed, llé is replaced with en and the corresponding prefix is added. Please note participles go at the end of a sentence. Conjugation of the word cpekllé (to speak) is below: