Dimkulo

Dimkulo (Dimkulo: dimkulo kućt) is an a priori international auxiliary language intended to be a universal second language for the people of the world, with a culturally neutral lexicon and grammar. It is mostly schematic, in which the words have no connection to other languages, but a small part of the lexicon (mostly basic vocabulary) is derived from global etymologids. Its grammar is completely regular and mostly isolating, and as such it is considered an easy language to learn. Dimkulo is written using the Latin script and has a completely phonemic orthography. The word dimkulo translates to "all humans" in English, promoting its cultural neutrality.

Phonology
The 24 consonants and 10 vowels of Dimkulo are based on the most common phonemes of the world's languages. Dimkulo does not use tone and stress, and allophones are discredited.

Consonants

 * /r/ is normally trilled, but it could also be flapped [ɾ]. Guttural R is not accepted and is considered a speech defect.
 * /ʼ/ only occurs medially.
 * /ń/ varies between alveolo-palatal and palatal.
 * /ć, ś, ź/ vary between postalveolar [tʃ, ʃ, ʒ], retroflex [ʈʂ, ʂ, ʐ], and alveolo-palatal [tɕ, ɕ, ʑ]. They are true palatal [cç, ç, ʝ] before /i, e/.

Vowels
The 5 vowels in Dimkudo are the most common vowels spoken in the world. Diphtongs could be opening /ie, uo, ia, ua/, or closing /ai, ei, oi, ui, au, eu, ou/.

Phonotactics
Dimkulo only permits initial consonant clusters with up to 2 consonants per syllable. The second character could only be a liquid /l, r, j, w/.

Orthography
Dimkulo is written in a completely phonemic Latin script. The characters are the same as their IPA counterparts except for /c, ć, ń, ś, ź/ which are pronounced [ts, tʃ, ɲ, ʃ, ʒ]

Example text
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: '''Elaj kulo hel tori śilka'as ara kojawila deha pańguni. Kankan hel bera guni deha hawŋa ara beja nu akukuja.'''