Sria

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.

A Word on Genders
Sria is a very heavily gender based language. All parts of speech, except particles, numbers, and conjunctions, take on a gender. This includes: verbs, nouns, adjectives, adverbs, pariticples, postpositions, supines, and gerunds. There are 2.5 genders. There are two main ones: masculine, feminine. There is a third gender used for personal pronuns that combines with a masculine or feminie gender. A personal pronoun first takes on an extra gender, then it adds on masculine or feminine.

Verbs
The following table lists all of the conjugations for verbs. Verbs conjugate for number, gender, tense, person, and mood

A Note on the Subjunctive
The bare subjunctive is used for expressing hopes, wishes, and desires. To express things like, it is good that, or it is bad that, use the phrases listed below.

Negating a verb
There are many different negation particles, that must agree with the verb in number and person. These particles are used for different things. Some of the uses are oulined below