Sria

General information
Sria /Srea/

Diphthongs
ai /ai/ er /eə/ oi /ɔɪ/ ur /ʊɘ/

Syllable
(C/V)(C)V(C)(C/V)

Above is the consonant structure for Sria. There are a few limitations. A syllable may never end in /h/. If /h/ is the second to last letter of a syllable, the next letter must be a vowel. A syllable may contain a diphthong, only if it is the main vowel of the word. Digraphs may appear in the slot right before and right after the main vowel. Digraphs must always be followed by a vowel.

Stress
If a word contains /i/, stressed is placed on the first occurrence of /i/. Otherwise, stress is placed on the last vowel of the word.

Verbs
Verbs in Sria have three possible endings, -it, et, and ét. Each of these endings have a different set of conjugations for tense, number, aspect and person. All three endings share a conjugation for mood, which is indicated by a particle placed infront of the verb. The most common aspects are the perfect, imperfective, and the progressive aspects.

The conjugations for the verbs are listed below

-it verbs
The conjugations for tense for -it verbs are placed as suffixes. Conjugations aspect are placed between the stem and the suffix. Notable irregular -it verbs are git (to go), solit (to know), and jasit (to have). The following chart outlines the conjugations for -it verbs The verbs git and solit have a stem change in all tenses, but share an irregular conjugation. The verb jasit has an irregular verb conjugation, but not a stem change.

-et verbs
The conjugations for aspect are placed as suffixes. The conjugations for tense are placed between the stem and the suffix. Notable -et irregulars are vebet (to come), hebet (to talkl) and deket (to tell).

-ét verbs
-ét verbs place conjugations for tense as suffixes, and the conjugations for aspects are placed behind the verb, connected by a dash.

Nouns
Nouns decline for 3 cases, the nominative, accusative, and dative cases.