Daineso

Nominative Case- (subject)
(ø)

[The man is there: Kan fātol koatō]

Accusative Case- (direct object)
(em (masculine)ˌ am (feminine)ˌ ī (neutral/natural))

[m. I saw the man: Au hema fātolem]

[f. I saw the womanː Au hema matrōlam]

[nat. I saw the water: Au hema supahī]

Dative Case- (indirect object)
(ø)

[I gave a present to the man: Au dona

komarī i fātol]

Ablative Case- (movement or cause)
Than: (e (masculine)ˌ ā (feminine)ˌ i (neutral)ˌ ōl (natural))

[m. I'm taller than the man: Koheanā au i fātole]

[f. I'm taller than the woman: Koheanā au i matrōlā]

[ne. I'm taller than the box: Koheanā au i hakomi]

[nat. I'm taller than the tree: Koheanā au i ketifōl]

Because: (e̋ (masculine) āa (feminine)ˌ jō (neutral/natural))

[m. This is the boy's because he bought it: Kunērē ɡa koɡa hel mē]

[f. This is the girl's because she bought it: Kunāra̋a ɡe koɡa ham mē]

[neu: This is the people's because they bought it: Mau kuniɡajōr ɡa koɡa lautē mē]

Genitive Case- (possessive)
(eg (masculine), āɡ (feminine)ˌ jōɡ (neutral/natural))

[m. That's his book: Mo heleg kinika ma]

[f. That's her book: Mo hamāɡ kinika ma]

[neu. That's a book: Mo jōɡ kinika ma]

Vocative Case- (address)
(me (masculine)ˌ mā (feminine)ˌ inē (neutral))

[m. Boy*, are you okay?: Me kunēˌ ou pahera?]

[f. Girl*, are you okay?: Mā kunāˌ ou pahera?]

[n. Hey, are you okay?: Inē kuniɡāˌ ou pahera?]


 * The word Boy and Girl can be omitted, but in Daineso, the boy and girl are kept.

Instrumental Case- (object used while performing action)
(tā)

[I eat with a plate: Au koɡa i salatā]

The:
(r 'basic noun', rū 'described noun')

Basic:

[The bicycle moves: Baikikālar tuha]

Described:

[The bicycle is big: Nōli rū baikikāla]

[The big bicycle moves: Baikikālarū nōli tuha]

A:
(ø 'basic noun', moh/ ø ˈdescribed nounˈ)

Basic:

[A bicycle moves: Baikikāla tuha]

Described:

[A bicycle is big: Nōli moh baikikāla]

[A big bicycle moves: Baikikāla nōli tuha]

Singular:
(ø)

Puacal:
(ō ˈbasic nounˈˌ moki ˈbasic noun with determinerˈˌ dū ˈdescribed nounˈˌ lohakā ˈdescribed noun with determinerˈ)

[Few bicycles move: Ō baikikāla tuha]

[Those few bicycles move: Moki baikikāla tuha īma]

[Few bicycles are big: Nōli dū baikikāla]

[These few big bicycles move: Lohakā baikikāla nōli tuha mēneˈi]

Plural:
(no ˈbasic nounˈˌ mau ˈbasic noun with determinerˈˌ mō 'described noun', tenī 'decribed noun with determiner')

[Bicycles move: No baikikāla tuha]

[Those certain bicycles move: Mau baikikāla tuha īma]

[Bicycles are big: Nōli mō baikikāla]

[These big bicycles move: Tenī baikikāla nōli tuha mēneˈi]

Grammatical Gender
In Daineso, there are two Main genders that can be used for most nouns.

The two genders are Natural and Neutral.

The sex-related genders are Masculine and Feminine.

Neuter is used for undescribed gender words like kid, baby, person, house, horse.

Natural is used for all item that aren't man-made like tree, grass, fire, ocean, and mountain.

Masculine is put on Neuter nouns when it is told as a male or male-like, like man, boy, male dog, fireman.

Feminine is put on Neuter nouns when it is told as a female like woman, girl, female pig, or nurse.