Ancient Va'aini

General information
The first written language in all of Nirunae, it was made by the Líavorn of Va'ainù and used an alphabet reminiscent of Professor Tolkien's Elvish and Hebrew, with consonants bearing vowel markings. It is chiefly polysynthetic and head-final,  with no irregularities whatsoever . Since it was very ancient and used primarily by members of the Advocate Conclave of Va'ainù, it did not "evolve" like most other languages would have.

(I'd like to thank the user Greatbuddha for helping me with polysynthetic grammar.)

Consonant Value
Every consonant has a "value" that can be changed for certain inflections. Every instance that there is two consonants in the same box, the one listed first is Primary and the other Secondary. N is the primary for  ŋ, l the primary for r, h  is the primary for Ɂ,  and s the primary for  ʃ.

Alphabet
These characters are all put in the third vowel group, indicated by two perpindicular lines. The first group is indicated by two short markings, and the second by one long. See below:

Place within a group is indicated by the diacritic above- the acute indicates first place. There is also the Charon and Circumflex, indicating the second and third groups respectively (second picture.)

Secondary pronunciation is indicated by-get this- a secondary indicator! It is a small "comma" beneath the character.



Vowels are transliterated as follows.

Vowel Groups
First group- a, á, e

Second group- ù, ai, o

Third group- i, ae, ì

In addition to vowel groups, there is also place within a group, i.e. "a" is first, "á" second, et cetera.

Phonotactics
Quùvarani has a very simple set of phonotactics due to its alphabet, with a strict ''CVCV... ''pattern with no method of deviation.F

Grammar
Quùvarani is a polysynthetic language, so a full sentence can be expressed as one word. Originally, there was no puncuation, and clauses were simply separated by being on different lines.

I have reconsidered much of this and declared a new system which exists mostly in my head and partially in my journal. It might take a while for more to get published here because I want to be more sure of anything I do first through the notes in my spirals. Thank you for your patience.

Nouns, Cases and Adpositions
There are four morphemes for each case. Cases and their use are below.

Ergative- does transitive verb-L

Accusative- recieves transitive verb-S

Absolutive- does intransitive verb-C

Dative- receives accusative-N

Reflexive- does verb to self-F