Nukilmea

General information
Nukilmea (litt lang of the north), is a language based on korean, heavily influenced by japanese and mandrin, though a part of the lang will still be a-priori.

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Vowel harmony
The vowel harmony in Nukilmea is front-back harmony, the neutral group is usable in words with both front and back harmony. Harmony does effect the gramar minimal, as most of the grammar is based on using the neutral group, some pre-and-affixes change due to vowel harmony. The opposites are : these opposites occur in the changes of pre-and-affixes and grammar.
 * ii and uu.
 * ee and oo.
 * e and o.
 * ea and oa.
 * ae and ao.

Alphabet
Nukilmea uses the korean, hangul, alphabet. wich is slightly adapted to their own needs.

the order of their alphabet is:

for the consonants (in roman : initial/final ) for vowels :

Phonotactics
The phonotactics of Nukilmea are simple.

A syllable is IV(F), A word has no limit to syllables, though all vowels have to be either front and neutral, or back an neutral (vowel harmony) Verbs and adjectives have fixed ending, more about this in the grammar section.
 * I is for initial, wich is either a consonant or the null-consonant.
 * V is a vowel, note that vowel harmony exists !
 * F is final, this is one of the final consonants.

Grammar

 * note that the verbs will be redone sone for sure!

Syntax
A normal sentence in Nukilmea ends on a verb, though the syntax is fully free, most people stick to the standard TSOV (topic-object-subject-verb), in speach the topic, subject and object tend to switch places often, but the verb tends to stick to the end of the sentence. In poetry it is more common for a verb to be in different places than on the end of the sentence thanm in actual speech, but it still is not that common to see this happen in basic poetry. This movement of the verb also tends to be more common in higher wealth communities and poetry than in others.

Verbs
The verbs in Nukilmea, almost always at the end of the sentence, conjugate in a fusional way to tense, aspect and also formality, affixes are used to add moods, unlike the aspect/tense the mood affixes are stackable.

Nukilmea has two kinds of verbs, the da (다) and the ru (르) verbs (obviusly loaned from korean and japanese respectively), they both conjugate differently. The conjugations themselves are not loaned from korean and japanese.

The endings and there conjugations can be used as the verb to be, 다 is used for adjectives and 르 is used for nouns. this is an example sentence of it in use as the verb to be.

「

 해니소람히미미담  the blue sky is nice
 * blue|ADJ|sky|ACC|nice|ADJ-HMBL|FORM-CONT|

」

.note that the hybrid aspect is a merge of habitual, gnomic and stative