Komet

Eyelash is an artistic language meant to sound similar to african languages such as Zulu and also French phonologically. It has many It borrows words from several languages.

still in progress, sorry for the messiness of the page

Pronounciation
Each syllable has a initial, middle and/or end. Any consonant listed above can be an initial sound, but only m, n, or ng can come after a vowel. All the other consonants must be followed by a vowel. M, n, and ng can also be their own syllable.

Stress is typically put on the second to last vowel. If it is not, the stressed syllable will be noted by a double vowel.

Examples

 * cema - 'EH-mah (what)
 * mtoto - m-TOH-to (child)
 * zabaa - zah-BAH (morning)
 * boliim - boh-LEEM (love)

Nouns
Eyelash has four noun classes. Below are definate articles- to create an indefinate article, simply omit the article. In Eyelash, if the subject is not a pronoun, it is followed by the word "we"
 * e - living things, humans, proper names, animals
 * kwa - places
 * o - inanimine objects
 * kwe - abstract ideas (honesty, kindness, etc.)

To make a noun plural, add men. This does not apply to pronouns.

Adjectives
Modifiers for nouns always come before the noun. If you add a longer description to the noun, such as "the person that hurt me", the description and noun must be connected by the word "da"

Examples:
 * gemba zabaa - a yellow sun
 * egemba ezabaa - the yellow sun
 * eheboliim nge da entu - the person that loves me

Verbs
Verbs are conjugated by tense, but not by the person. The pronoun is put into one compound word with the verb. A typical verb has two syllables. Examples: cheche (to dance)
 * Present tense: add "-m" and also doubles the second vowel to indicate the stress on it
 * Past tense: add "-dim"
 * Future Tense: add "zhom"
 * Creating negative sentances: add "-b'o-" between the pronoun and verb
 * ngechecheem - I dance, I am dancing
 * ngechechedim - I danced, I was dancing
 * ngechechezhom - I will dance
 * ngeb'ochecheemzhom - I will not dance

Syntax
Eyelash is a subject-verb-object language.

Basic word order: subject - time - place - adverb - verb - object.