Wexalian

General Informaton
Wexilian comes from Old High German. The speakers live on the islands of Terschelling, Vlieland, Ameland, and in a reletively large chunk of lang in the modern-day Netherlands in order of incorporation into the ethnic groups majority. The name came from the medevil name of the island, Wexalia. The Wexalian name for itself, Feschle [ˈfɛʃlə], comes from the native term wecsile.

Consonants
¹ Allophone before /k/ or /g/

Vowel
Phonemic Diphthongs: {aɪ̯ eɪ̯ oʊ̯ oʏ̯ oɪ̯} [ʁ] allophonically becomes [ə̯ˠ] in a closed syllable or [ə̯] in an open one. This allophony doesn't occur in an initial open syllable.

Stress
Stress usually falls on the antepenultimate syllable. In syllables with three or less syllables, the closed syllable take precedence.

Alphabet
(1) Only appears in the digraph ck representing the old geminate K, but now just means a short vowel before it (2) Stressed E and O in an open syllable are long. Everywhere else is short. E in particular is always [ə] finally. (3) [ʁ] allophonically becomes [ə̯ˠ] in a closed syllable or [ə̯] in an open one. This allophony doesn't occur in an initial open syllable. (4) Þ and S are [ð] and [z] respectivally finally, intervocalically, or pre-voiced consonant. S is [ʃ] before another consonant. (5) H is [x] initially. (6) Closed syllable. (7) voiceless finally, {p t k}.

Diacritcs and Multigraphs

 * Pf pf - [p͡f]
 * Th th - [θ] or [ð] ([ð] finally, intervocalically, or pre-voiced consonant.)
 * Ch ch - [x] or [ç] ([ç] allophonically before a front vowel)
 * Sch sch - [ʃ] anywhere
 * SS ß – [s] anywhere
 * (double letter) - pseudo-closed syllable (or geminate ^)
 * Ai ai - [aɪ̯]
 * Ei ei - [eɪ̯]
 * Ou ou - [oʊ̯]
 * Eu eu - [oʏ̯]
 * Oi oi - [oɪ̯]
 * Oa' oa, Ea ea, Öa öa - [ɔː ɛː œː]
 * Ä ä - [æ] ([ɛ] before [j])
 * Ü ü - [y] or [ʏ] (the latter in a closed syllable)
 * Ö ö - [øː] or [œ] (the latter in a closed syllable)
 * -en, -el - [n̩] [l̩]

Declension
Red and Blue declensions are from feminine and masculine declensions in OHG respectivally.

Class I – blue a/o declension
It came from the a-stems (where the ja-stems merged). þäj is from tag.

Class II – eo declension
It came from the wa-stems. knu is from kneo.

Class III – red a/o declension
It came from the ō-stems. gebe is from gëba. ¹ Since gebe already ends in [ə], the genitive form doesn't change.

Class IV – long i-declension
It came from the "feminine abstract noun" declension. höchi comes from hōhī.

Class V – blue i/0 declension
It came from the masculine i-declension. gäst is from gast.

Class VI – red i/0 declension
It came from the feminine i-declension. staþ comes from stat. Staþ and others like it (where the word ends in /ɑC/ where C = {f ð x}) suffer a regular irregularity where in the nom-acc form, they're their standard form (staþ), but /ɑ/ becomes /æ/ and the fricative if fortified to {p t͡s k}.

Translation
Lord's Prayer

Below is Old High German. NOT Wexalian XD.

fater unser du dar bist in himile, | si giheilagot din namo, | queme dīn rihhi, | si dīn willo | sō hēr in himile ist, | sō si hēr in erdu. | unsar brōt tagalihhaȥ gīb uns hiutu, | inti furlaȥ uns unsara sculdi, | sō wīr fūrlaȥemes unsaren sculdigon, | inti ni gileistest unsih in costunga, | ūzouh ārlosi unsih fōn ubile.

Sound Changes II
C - consonant; V - vowel; grave - unstressed; acute - stressed; Ɵ - closed syllable; O - open syllable; C̬ = {b d g l m n}

Notes: /e/ and /ɔ/ are recognized as [ɛ] and [ɔ]. /a/ is recognized as [ä]. /r/ is recognized as [r~ɾ]. /s/ and /s̱/ are recognized as [s̪] and [s~s̱]. s̱ > ʃ / _C  *s̱co:no > ʃko:no ʃk > ʃ / _# *fis̱k > fiʃk > fiʃ w > v / #_ *wīs > vīs t > t͡s / V_{i i: u u: e e:} *xiutu > xiut͡su g > ɣ / V_V, _# *skuldigon > ʃkuldiɣon {p k} > {f x} / _C *weksile > vexsile d > θ / C_# t > θ / #_VCV, C_VCV x > ç / before or after {i e ī ē} *rix:i > riç:i –New Stress Rules¹– V̀ > ə / C_# ! V: *ʃko:no > ʃko:nə | CV̀{n l r} > Cə{n l r} / _# ! i > ɪ *ʃkuldiɣon > ʃkuldiɣən | {e a o} > ə / Ɵ_# i-umlaut²: {u u: o o: a a:} > {y y: ø ø: æ æ:} *ubile > ybilə a a: > ɑ ɑ: *furlas > fyrlɑs ɣ > ∅ ! (_#, #_) > j |³ loss of intertonic vowel⁴ *ybilə > yblə {i y ø e o u} > {ɪ ʏ œ ɛ ɔ ʊ} / Ɵ, V_# *fyrlæs > fʏrlæs æ > ɛ / _j V́ > V́: ! Ɵ {V: V́ V́:}t > {V: V́ V́:}s / _# *bro:t > bro:s eɪ̯ > aɪ̯ | ie̯ > i | io̯ > ø | ou̯ > oʊ̯ | iu̯ > oʏ̯ ! _{ʃ t͡s x⁵ k} > oɪ̯ eo > i oʏ̯ > oɪ̯ / i-umlaut r > ʁ v > f *vīs > fīs i: > eɪ̯ ! _{n ʁ l z} > ɛ | {è: ò: ø̀:} > {ɛ ɔ œ} | {æ: ɑ: u: y:} > {æ ɑ u y} t͡:s > s: | ç: > ʃ | x: > xk C: > C ! xs > ʃ *vexsile > fɛʃlə {e: o: ø:} > {ɛ: ɔ: œ:} / Ɵ –Final Obstruent devoicing⁶– (p t k) > (f θ x) / ɑ_# *stat > ʃtɑθ b > v / V_C, V_Cə{n l} *yblə > y:vlə s > z / V_V, _C̬ , _# , #_ *a:rlosi > ɑʁlœzə| θ > ð / V_V , #_  *tagalix:as > ðælʃæz Vʁ > Və̯ˠ / Ɵ | Vʁ > Və̯ / O _C *fʏʁlæs > fʏə̯læz ən, əl > n̩, l̩ ¹ Stress usually falls on the antepenultimate syllable. In syllables with three or less syllables, the closed syllable take precedence.

² The i-umlaut in Boyait occurs if an adjacent syllable contains one of {i i: e e: l j ɣ}

³  When lost intervocalically, vowels fuse into diphthongs and two of the same vowels don't become long

⁴ Short intertonic vowels are lost. Long intertonic vowels are shortened and simplified to their schwa sound, {ɪ ɪ ə ə ə ə ə} for {i y ø e o ɑ/æ u}. This is nullified if it would create a triple consonant cluster.

⁵ Becomes [ç]

⁶ Applies to {b d g ð z} –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Ideas:
 * Make verb ending suffixes but no classes
 * Noun declension with classes
 * Lone definite article