Braziliaŋ

General information
Braziliaŋ is an a posteriori language based on the popular variety of Brazilian Portuguese while having a few artificially constructed features. Three factors were fundamental in its development:

1) Identity: The use of the indigenous vowel Y and the nasalizing consonant Ŋ as well as some borrowings from the main indigenous languages, Tupy and Guarany, give the language a unique flavor among the Romance languages.

2) Modernity: Many popular innovations in phonology, grammar and syntax are included such as the loss of number marking on content words, the simplification of the conjugation system and a different syntax compared to Portugal Portuguese. Some constructed features like the dubious gender are also present.

3) Facility (or Ease): The orthography is more efficient in order to represent the phonetic system employed by the Brazilian people. Consonant pronunciation is more predictable, but vowel pronunciation goes the opposite way: it's been more prescriptive, considering the great variation both in accent and in the different forms and derivations of the same word.

More details at the blog (in Portuguese) Karta Sosial - Braziliaŋ.