Taalk Aur

Consonants
There are no fricatives. Bilabial and alveolar nasals can be voiced or unvoiced. Voiced nasals, retroflex consonants and [ j ] can be geminated ; vowels preceeding geminated consonants are always short.

Vowels
There are two diphthongs : ai and au. There is a distinction between short and long vowels. The mid-central vowel is always short.

Since there is lenght distinction for both vowels and consonants, there are minimal pairs like : ama = to love, amma = mum, aama = here, amaa = loved , ammaa = come here !

Alphabet Long vowels are written as double letters : "aa", "ii" and "uu". The mid-central vowel is written "e". Geminate consonants are written as double letters : pp, tt, thth, kk, xx, jj, whwh, ww, rr, rhrh, ll, lhlh and lyly.

Stress
Stress is predictable :

Words with stress on the last syllable
 * 1) Monosyllabic words ( ta - to stay )
 * 2) Place adverbs ( aam a - here )
 * 3) Future and desiderative verbs ( panhk au - will make )

Words with stress on the penultimate syllable
The majority of words have stress on the penultimate syllable ( a ma - to love )

Words with stress on the antepenult syllable

 * 1) Words of four or more syllables having short vowels in their last three syllables ( maat u lhtaku - mill )
 * 2) Words of three or more syllables having a diphthong in their antepenult syllable ( kaukaalte - quickly )

Grammar
Taak Aur grammar tends to be regular.

Articles
Indefinite article is not present.

The definite article is al ( an before words whose first letter is l ), used for both singular and plural words.

Nouns
Nouns are declensed by case ( nominative, genitive, dative, accusative and locative ) and by number ( singular and plural ).

There are three declensions : the first, whose nominative ends with a nasal consonant, the second, whose nominative ends with another consonant, and the third, whose nominative ends with a vowel.

First Declension

Second Declension
Third Declension

Adjectives
Adjectives follow the same declension of nouns.

Verbs
Verbs are simple and quite regular. There are two tenses ( present and past ), four moods ( indicative, imperative, desiderative and infinitive ) and two numbers ( singular and plural ). Verbs do not conjugate according to person.

Infinitive
Infinitive always ends with "a" : kalla - to call, bajja - to buy, ama - to love.

Indicative
Present Present indicative has two forms, singular and plural. Singular form is created by the desinence "aa" to verb's stem, so the only difference between infinitive and present indicative is the final vowel's lenght. Plural form is created by adding the desinence "aang" : kallaa - call ( singular subject ), kallaang - call ( plural subject ).

Past
Singular past is formed by adding the desinence "elhe", while plural past desinence is "elheng" : kallelhe - called ( singular subject ), kallelheng - called ( plural subject ).

Desiderative
Desiderative verbs have the meaning of "wanting to (verb)". The stress falls ever on the last syllable. Present

Singular present desiderative is formed by adding the desinence "kau", while plural desinence is "kiing" : kallau - would call ( singular subject ), kalliing - would call ( plural subject ).

Past

Past desiderative is formed analytically by adding the adverb "ja" ( before ) to present desiderative forms : ja kallau - would have called ( singular subject ), ja kalliing - would have called ( plural subject ).

Imperative
Imperative is simply formed by putting the emphatic pronouns after the infinite verb : kalla thxii - call (you) !

Irregular verbs
The only irregular verbs are etha - to be, ta  - to stay, lha - to walk and tuula - to receive/to gather. Their conjugation pattern, shown in the table, is really different from the regular one.