Nusblatish

Nusblatish is a language created by Julgat. It is a language for his conworld called the Chungganation. A number of people will use the language for distinguishable purposes, and Julgat has said that the language will also be used for his personal use. The language is somewhat hard to understand due to the random combination of words (and some loanwords) in the language, and the plentiful suffixes one has to memorize.

Alphabet
The Nusblatish alphabet is virtually the case compared to English, although accents like á, é, í, ó, ú, and ñ are visible in the language, due to specific grammar rules in the language. However, the letters h and k are not permitted in the language (Exceptions are diphthongs with the letter h, excluding sh)

Important Grammar Rules
(If consonant) Drop out the duplicate. (If vowel or n) Combine by using accents. (Example: a + a = á) (If s) Combine the two s into th.
 * All root words have chunks of C-V, or V-C. (Example: house in Nusblatish is gapebo)
 * To pluralize nouns, add -sa at the end of the word.
 * Repetition of syllables and/or letters are not allowed.
 * To fix a repetition of syllable, drop the duplicate.
 * To fix a repetition of letters
 * No h and k are permitted in the language. As a replacement, use j and c.

Verb Conjugations
Verbs mostly conjugate according to their tense, just like in Chungganese. Here are the following conjugations with the verb bimira, meaning "to eat":

Perfect Tense
For the perfect progressive tense, just combine conjugations.

Grammatical Cases
All cases are suffixes, unless specified.

1. Nominative Case

Indicates the subject of a verb. Has no suffix.

(English) I am eating. (Nusblatish) co gubimi.

2. Accusative Case

Indicates the direct object of a verb. Has a suffix of -ne.

(English) He eats an apple. (Nusblatish) el bime wanevene.

3. Dative Case

Indicates the indirect object of a verb. Has a suffix of the present verb conjugation of the giver.

(English) He gave you a present. (Nusblatish) el gecabu rubone.

4. Ablative Case

Indicates movement from something. Has a suffix of -de.

(English) I went from here to there. (Nusblatish) jul tobda mecade feliro.

5. Causative Case

Indicates the cause. Add -por as a prefix, then add the noun. If person, add conjugation.

(English) I was hurt because of him. (Nusblatish) isti geniba porea.

6. Genitive Case

Indicates ownership. Has a suffix of -mi. Take note that this only applies to common nouns. Proper nouns have to be added -u. (English) That is John's toy. (Nusblatish) gero ista wonemi wanu.

7. Predicative case

Indicates the predicate. Has a suffix of -qe.

8. Prepositional Case

Indicates the object of the preposition. Has a suffix of the corresponding preposition.

Numbers
Instead of a Base 10 numbering system, Nusblatish follows a Base 26 numbering system.

Lexicon
Main article: Nusblatish/Lexicon