Reformed foxian

When the foxian inhabitants thought that their old language was very difficult. Because of that, the forgeiners and the foxian cildren could not learn the language easily. They decided to create a new language borrowing european and slavic words and teach it to the newborns and when the all the adults who colud speak the old foxian died, the reformed foxian became the only official language in foxia. The rules are quite easier but without losing the nature of foxian culture. Which says the language must be complicated itself but not necesarily difficult.

=Alphabet= The reformed foxian alphabet has 29 letters. the letters sound similar to spanish but with some additions:

a á b c č d e é f g h i k l m n ň o ó p r ř s š t u w z ž

phonetic guidance:


 * a: sounds like a in "arm"
 * á: sounds like "e" in "bed"
 * b: sounds like "b" in "big"
 * c: sounds like "ts" in "cats"
 * č: sounds like "ch" in chick
 * d: sounds like "d" in "door"
 * e: sounds like the "á"
 * é: sounds like "ee" in "see"
 * f: sounds like "f" in "feel"
 * g: sounds like "g" in "gun"
 * h: sounds like "h" in "hell"
 * i: sounds like "é"
 * k: sounds like "k" in "key"
 * l: sounds like "l" in "look"
 * m: sounds like "m" in "mall"
 * n: sounds like "n" in "noon"
 * ň: sounds like the spanish "ñ"
 * o: sounds like "u" in "cut"
 * ó: sounds like "oo" in "soon"
 * p: sounds like "p" in "pool"
 * r: sounds like japanese "r"
 * ř: sounds like spanish "rr" in "carro" or in "correr"
 * s: sounds like "s" in "sell"
 * š: sounds like "sh" in "ship"
 * t: sounds like "t" in "two"
 * u: sounds like "ó"
 * w: sounds like "v" in "visit
 * z: sounds like "ds" in "cards"

=Basic Grammar=

gender
In reformed foxian, there are three genders which are masculine, femenine, and neutral. There are some standarised rules and vocabulary topics which define the gender of the nouns and adjectives. We will see ten examples of the application of these rules for each gender:

masculine gender rules

 * all singular masculine nouns end in -o


 * all plural masculine nouns end in -oz


 * all singular direct object masculine nouns end in -ó


 * all plural direct object masculine nouns end in -óm

masculine gender topics
tools, items, objects, places, instruments

female gender rules

 * all singular female nouns end in -a


 * all plural female nouns end in -az


 * all singular direct object female nouns end in -á


 * all plural direct object female nouns end in -ám

female nouns topics
plants, foods, liquids, gases

neutral gender rules

 * all singular neutral nouns end in -e


 * all plural neutral nouns end in -ez 


 * all singular direct object nouns end in -é


 * all plural direct object nouns end in -ém 

neutral nouns topics
abstract things, planets, linguistic and mathematic terms, sciences, subjects.

numbers
in foxian, the numbers are usually neutral, but when you use numbers to count objects, they turn into the gender of the counted objects:

derived numbers
derived numbers are made from the roots given above, puting them together:


 * three hundres flowers: tricienta floraz
 * five hundred twenty cars: wicient-zudiezo carioz
 * seventy loves : sewdieze amorez

to put each word together in the numbers, you use these "-" for example:

1954: mil-newcient-widiez-kuate

2036: zumil-tridiez-sie

gender in adjectives
the adjectives are a kind of words that is affected by the gender of the described object, we have a little list of six rules:


 * 1) all singular masculine adjectives end in -ot
 * 2) all plural masculine adjectives end in -ow
 * 3) all singular femenine adjectives end in -at
 * 4) all plural femenime adjectives end in -aw
 * 5) all singular neutral adjectives end in -et
 * 6) all plural neutral adjectives end in -ew

for example, we have a root for "little" and one for "big":


 * a little pencil: pekenot penco
 * little pencils: pekenow pencoz
 * a big pencil: grandot penco
 * big pencils: grandow pencoz
 * a little tree: pekenat arbola
 * little trees: pekenaw arbolaz
 * a big tree: grandat arbola
 * big trees: grandaw arbolaz
 * a little relationship: pekenet relatie
 * little relationships: pekenew relatiez
 * a big relationship: grandet relatie
 * big relationships: grandew relatiez

=Verbs=

verbs are not affected by the gender, but by the time and the person. there are forms for first person, second person, third prson an plural persons:

future tense
=Example text=

Ni nowen porki pent Teresa wantak komu diez-tria cerezám.

ka ni sek dulsat fresa pent ka tingek ké.

oh, meat fresita Teresita sek plořa pierdedita!

ka sek fresita eun cerezitaz.

oh fresita Teresita!

ENGLISH

I don't know why but Teresa wants to eat thirteen cherries.

she is not a sweet strawberry but she thinks that.

oh, my little strawberry Teresa is very lost!

she is a strawberry in cherries.

oh little strawberry teresa!