Okemunatel

Vowels
Vowels are written as accents below or above the preceding consonant. The letter o is used as demonstration in this chart.

Writing System
The Latin alphabet is used along with occasional punctuation modifiers in place of the written script to provide ease of typing on a computer keyboard. {| class="article-table" !Letter !
 * +Writing System

კ
!

ც
!

ჵ
!

ძ
!

მ
!

መ
!

ማ
!

ი
!

Ⴕ
!

ფ
!Letter !
 * Sound
 * p
 * b
 * m
 * f
 * v
 * th
 * dh
 * t
 * l
 * ʔ
 * ʔ

ო
!

ღ
!

რ
!

ლ
!

დ
!

Ⴆ
!

Ⴊ
!

𝖴
!

ɥ
!

ე

 * Sound
 * tapped r
 * tapped r

(r’)
 * rolled r

(r”) uvular
 * voiced

fricative

(r@) uvular
 * voiced

trill

(r̃) !Letter ! Ⴖ !
 * r
 * k
 * g
 * s
 * z
 * n

h
!

ჲ
!

ზ
!

გ
!

Ⴒ
!

Ⴜ
!

Ρ
!

Ⴋ
!

ქ
bilabial
 * Sound
 * sh
 * zh
 * ch
 * j
 * y
 * voiceless
 * voiceless

fricative

(h@) palatal
 * voiceless

approximant

(h!) (ch@)
 * h
 * voiceless velar fricative
 * ng
 * }

Verbs
Verbs are conjugated according to tense (Past, Past hypothetical, Past negative, Active, Active hypothetical, Active negative, Future, Future hypothetical, and Future Negative), and person (First person singular, Third person masculine singular, Third person neuter singular, Third person feminine singular, Second person singular, First person plural, Third person masculine plural, Third person neuter plural, Third person feminine plural, and Second person plural). Each hyphen represents a consonant inserted in between the vowels to signify the meaning of the verb.

Verbs are signified by the use of four vowels with one consonant in between each.

The first consonant signifies where the action is taking place, the second to signify the action/movement of the verb, and the last to signify the time

Syntax
Unnamed uses an VSO sentence structure.

Lexicon
Words can be built and customised by the user, but this is the official lexicon of the language.