Hazetau

This is a constructed language designed primarily to be easier to learn than a natural language yet can convey information as fast as or faster than a natural language. The language is completely artificial and uses root words choose via random number generator on a spreadsheet.

Phonetic Skill Level
The language can be spoken almost completely isolated with no conjugation, no diphthong and no stressed vowels pronunciation. This is referred to as "Basic", two or more vowels together can be spoken individual, two or more of the same vowel would be spoken with a writen aspiration between them. Basic pronunciation is easiest to learn at the cost of making the language slower to convey information, both vocally and when writen

"Advanced" pronunciation utilizes fused adjectives instead of isolated conjugation, vowels can be pronounced as diphthongs, two are more vowels can be spoken as stress vowels or even with tonal shift. When written "w" and "y" can be used to force diphthong pronunciation Advanced pronunciation allows the language to be spoken faster at the cost of being phonetically more difficult.

Example

Phonology
All words are constructed of morras ended with an added vowel. If you hear more then one vowel spoken without a consonant between them then you are hearing the end of the word. Added suffixes and fused adjectives do not have morra format. Diphthongs and triphthongs are allowed again only at the end of words. Two consonants spoken together are only allowed in cases of fusion words or multiple common adjective fusions.

Grammatical Classifier Suffix
All words technically end in a suffix in this language, the bare minium suffix is the added single vowel, which defines what class a word is: More specific classifications can be added by adding one of these double vowel groups: Examples

"I" is "piu" but as when I want to declare that noun as a subject noun it is "piuiu", and a objective noun it is "piuau" which means "me" as and adjective to a noun declaring ownership of it is "piuua" or "piuwa" which means "my".

"go" is "sii" the infinitive "to go" is "siiei".

"she cut herself" is "soo huiai"

Adjective Fusion
30 adjectives, 10 for nouns, verbs and adjectives can be fused with a noun/verb/adjective by using the first letter of the adjective as a suffix. Fusion capable adjectives are base adjectivs that end in -ia and provide tense for verbs, those that end in -aa that are adjectives for adjectives, those that end in -ua that provide number and type for nouns.

Examples

"go now" translates to "sii mia" and fusing the adjective is "siim"

"those people" translates to "duu mua dua" which means "person plural specific" and fusing the adjectives is "duumd"

"the hunters" translates to "zopomoiou rua dua" which means "hunt-noun person specific" and fusing the adjectives is "zopomoioudr"

Word Order
Sentence order is most efficient as Subject Object Verb. Any word order can be used but requires added suffixing to declare the words grammatical class. SVO is also viable but if adding in another object that object must be declared as a tertiary object, while in SOV it can simply be added to the end of the sentence without added classifier suffix.

Examples

Lets take the sentence "I send a box to her" and translate but keep the word order: "piu giiie teluuau sooeu" because the subject is the only word in the right grammatical place it is the only word without a grammatical classifier suffix added. In proper SOVT order the sentence would be "piu teluu gii soo" or in English as "I box send her". Any word order is possible with added grammatical classifiers such as OVS or in nonsensical English as "she send box I" would make sense as "sooeu giiie teluuau piuiu"

Counting
Numbers are expressed as fusions of up to three decimals long, with more decimals added as separate words.

Examples

Base Verbs
Table below provides translation for all possible 3-letter Verbs. Format is consonant-vowel-vowel (CVV). All of these words end in -i

Base Nouns
Table below provides translation for all possible 3-letter Nouns. Format is consonant-vowel-vowel (CVV). All of these words end in -u

Base Adjectives
Table below provides translation for all possible 3-letter adjectives. Format is consonant-vowel-vowel (CVV). All of these words end in -a

Base Syntax
Table below provides translation for all possible 3-letter syntax words. Format is consonant-vowel-vowel (CVV). All of these words end in -e

Base Abstract Nouns
Table below provides translation for all possible 3-letter abstract nouns. Format is consonant-vowel-vowel (CVV). All of these words end in -o