Iberian Gothic

General Information
Iberian Gothic is an East Germanic language descended from the tongue of the Visigoths, a Germanic tribe whose origins lie in Scandinavia. It is descended from the same branch of East Germanic languages that Ostrogothic and Vandalic are from. Owing much to the multilingual heritage of the Iberian peninsula, Iberian Gothic shares much in common developmentally with Spanish and Catalonian.

Consonants
The voiced obstruents /b d g/ lenite to [β ð ɣ] internally, but harden to [b d g] after a nasal consonant.

The vowels /i u/ become semivowels [j w] when adjacent to another vowel.

/r/ is a trill initially, before a pause, and after /l n s/. Otherwise, it is a tap.

The graphemes represent /kw gw/, except before, where it represents /k g/.

/m n/ become labiodental /ɱ/ before /f/

The -A Declension
This declension contains masculine nouns from the former -a and -ja declensions. The oblique ending of the singular was innovated by analogy with the nominative, and the final /s/ of the nominative singular was lost by analogy with the oblique singular. The /j/ of the -ja declension was lost by analogy with the -a declension.

The -O declension
This declension contains feminine nouns from the former -ō and -jō declensions. The oblique ending of the singular was innovated by analogy with the nominative, and the final /s/ of the nominative singular was lost by analogy with the oblique singular. The /j/ of the -jō declension was lost by analogy with the -ō declension, and the -i in the nominative singular of the long stems became -a by analogy with the short stems.

The -I declension
This declension contains both masculine and feminine nouns. The oblique ending of the singular was innovated by analogy with the nominative, and the final /s/ of the nominative singular was lost by analogy with the oblique singular.

The -U declension
This declension contains masculine nouns. The oblique ending of the singular was innovated by analogy with the nominative, and the final /s/ of the nominative singular was lost by analogy with the oblique singular. The /j/ of the nominative plural endings was lost by analogy with the other endings.

The -AN declension
This declension contains masculine nouns.

The -ON declension
This declension contains feminine nouns from the former -ōn declension.

The -IN declension
This declension contains feminine nouns from the former -ein declension.

The -R declension
This declension contains masculine and feminine nouns.

Verbs
Similar to German, Iberian Gothic utilizes both separable and inseparable prefixes in order to change the meaning of some verbs. Separable prefixes, such as af-, can usually be detached