Boselenan

=Orthography=

Alphabet
The Boselenan alphabet consists of 39 letters. This includes all the basic latin letters except q, w, x and y, as well as 6 letters with diacritics, 9 digraphs and 2 trigraphs.

A B C CH D DY E É F G GŬ H HŬ Ĥ I Ĭ J K KŬ L M N NY O Ó Ŏ P R S SH SHŬ T TY U Ŭ V Z ZH ZHŬ

All the digraphs, trigraphs and letters with diacritics are treated as letters in their own right, and are placed seperately in alphabetical order. The letters ĭ, ŏ and ŭ are never seen at the beginning of words, and ĭ & ŏ are only ever seen after vowels, as they only represent the second element in dipthongs.

Often, the letters q, w, x, y which are not used in native words, are used in foreign placenames. For example, Qazaĥstan ("Kazakhstan") where "Q" represents /k/.

Ĭ ĭ Ŏ ŏ Ŭ ŭ Ĥ ĥ

=Basic Grammar=

Personal & Demonstrative Pronouns
The demonstrative pronouns (i.e. this and that when used as a pronoun in their own right) are treated just like personal pronouns in Boselenan.

Examples
 * leneĭ la chiedye - "I like this"
 * shaŏ aŭ shtienie - "That is fine"

Interrogative & Relative Pronouns
The interrogative pronouns of Boselenan are those which begin a question.

Relative pronouns are formed by adding the word hugt before the interrogative.

Nouns
Boselenan is an agglutinating language, in which nouns are declined for number and case.

Articles
There are two sets of articles used with Boselenan nouns. Which one is used depends on the definateness of the noun, as well as the number.

Examples:
 * ak okŭont - "the man"
 * ''akér okŭontér - "the men"
 * on okŭont - "a man"
 * onér okŭontér - "some/any men"

Number
There are three grammatical numbers: the singular, plural and absent. In order to show the plural, the suffix -ér is added to the end of the noun. In order to show the "absent", the suffix -megt is added.

So take the following noun taŏk "book" becomes taŏkér "books" or taŏkmegt "no books". For example Oshŭet la taŏkmegt "I have no books/I don't have any books".

Case
Boselenan employs the use of 11 noun cases. In most nouns, the nominative and accusative case are not differentiated. The nominative-accusative distinction is maintained only in personal and reflective pronouns.

Numbers
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