Ifpañul

Ifpañul is a language that was spoken in Nueva Tierra until the 400th century AW and is was the last common ancestor to the language family it comprises, much in the same way Vulgar Latin was to the Romance Languages. It is believed that the ultimate speakers of this language may have been the people of the 'sierras' of Peru and Ecuador, where heavy contact with Quechua and Aymara left a mark on it.

Vowels
What makes a striking difference with it's ancestor, Ifpañul only has three vowels, but they have long and short counterparts:

Words distinguished by vowel length are for example khába (layer) and khabá (capable).

Consonants
Another interesting development is the contrast between aspirated and non-aspirated voiceless consonants word-initially. Generally, the orthography of Ifpañul is purely phonetic, so a table with the explanation of each graph and digraph can be seen below:

Trigraphs like 'tsh', or 'tzh' therefore must sound like /tʃ/ and /dʒ/ respectively.