Proto-Whisper

Classification and Dialects
This is an initial sketch for Whisper, and has roots in English, Hewbrew, Japanese, and French.

Phonotactics

 * A [ t̪ ʰ ] cannot occur in the middle of a word, and  [ɾ] cannot end or begin a word. The letter 't' can stand for both, but can be clearly derived from context.
 * Vowels can only follow a consonant, and dipthongs are dissalowed.
 * [f] cannot follow or be followed by a consonant.
 * [q] cannot be followed by a consonant.
 * [p ɔ] cannot start a word, exept plurals. See 'nouns' below.
 * Each vowel must follow a consonant.

Nouns
Nouns have a plural form. To make a noun plural, prepend 'po' to the word. For example: Another example:
 * 'panana'  -> "Banana"
 * 'popanana' -> "Bananas"
 * 'ni' -> "Me'
 * 'poni' -> "Us" (ambiguous inclusivity)

Numbers
Numbers are adjectives most of the time, thus prepend a noun. Other numbers are constructed as you'd expect: There is but one exception: forty. This is because bible/torah verses often refer to the number forty. Ie: 40 days and 40 nights, 40 years in the desert, etc. If I am going to base this on hebrew at all, or make some effort to translate bible verses, I think this may be a novel idea:
 * 127 -> 'lenen len pen non'
 * 3 546 -> 'ten tenen koko lenen qen pen leno'
 * 45 -> 'qen pen koko'
 * 10 000 -> 'pen tenen'
 * 1 000 000 -> 'tenen tenen'

Verbs
All verbs end in '-o', and conjugate replacing that ending. Verb conjugates due to person, but not number.

Note that the present indicative is also the subjunctive. For example:
 * To be, 'so': 'ni sol Daniel' -> "I'm Daniel".
 * To like, 'leko': 'te lekot kin!' -> "He/She liked you."
 * To hurt, 'kano': 'qe kanopon kin?' -> "Who's going to hurt you?"
 * To like, 'leko': 'ni lekot pin panana' -> "I would like a banana."