Bae Rae Kha

Overview
Bae Rae Kha ( literally meaning sound of mouth ) is the main language spoken in the Red Land, the biggest continent of Xaa planet.

Bae Rae Kha is spoken by Zete Ukrer, an humanoid race. The planet is inhabitated by other less important people,  all governed by Zete Ukrer Empire, excluding the Zaater, mermaid-like people living in big rivers really far from Red Land and its cities.

Few Sample Phrases
Tuapla tař he lař he uke arbule bulpletrer.

Green plants need soil, water and light.

Literally : Need soil and water and light plants  green.



'''Stetrutura ukkekuš ! '''

Light a little fire !

Literally : Ligh-imperative fire-little.

''' Tař tařrer he saz plerer he zel plererkekuš bssua. '''

 Soil is brown, sea is blue and sky is light blue.

 Literally : Soil brown and sea blue and sky blue-little be.

''' Ekekubssua el xbraketp řx uhuekerer he ekekgaba ahaxpeur uhuekerer pgabe lulhur. '''

They have been in that big city and they gave me a big present.

Literally :  past-be in that city big and past-give to me big present they.





Linguistic Introduction
Bae Rae Kha is a really particular language, having a grammar that presents various grammatical

Nouns and adjectives, according to their ending letter, can be distinguished by gender ( male or female ) number    ( singular or plural ) and case ( plain, dative, propositional ).

Pronouns are declensed by person ( first, second or third ), number ( singular, dual, trial or plural ), clusivity           ( inclusive or exclusive ) and case ( nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, prepositional, vocative ).

Verbs present a fundamental distincion between affirmative and negative form. All of the verbs can be conjugated into the two forms, but the conjugation is completely different. Affirmative verbs are conjugated according to mood   ( indicative or imperative ), tense ( present, immediate past or past ) and aspect ( continuous, habitual, inchoative or iterative ). Contrarily, negative verbs are conjugated according to mood ( indicative or imperative ), tense             ( present, imperfect, preterite, or future ), person ( first, second or third ), number ( singular, dual, trial or plural ) and aspect ( continuous, inchoative or pausative ) ; negative verbs present formal forms too.

Words, particularly verbs, can be rich of affixes that may add grammatical or semantical meaning.

Phonology

The letters are written as their phonemic symbols, excluding the ones indicated in brackets. There are no nasal sounds, and the wovels are all unrounded

The letter ř can be freely pronunciated as alveolar approximant, retroflex flap or uvular trill. The vowels <span style="font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"ArialUnicodeMS";mso-ansi-language:IT; mso-fareast-language:IT;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA"> ɤ  and  <span style="font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"ArialUnicodeMS";mso-ansi-language:IT; mso-fareast-language:IT;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">ə  are never written and can be freely used to separate consonant clusters ( particularly abundant in this language ), without adding any grammatical or semantical meaning.