Naqhamat

General information
Naqhan language is a language spoken in the mountainous Eastern territory of Arga bordering the North Etexum. It is a secret language developed in the year 181 before the Chalossian Revolution by the men of Naqhakoe to cover their information from the women. Today it is used as an everyday language by the men of Naqhakoe.

Vowels
1 Allophones of [i y] after uvular and pharyngeal consonants.

Alphabet
The Cyrillic and Latin scripts can be used for transliteration.

Nouns and verbs
Nouns in Naqhamat have 4 classes. Example verb "ana", "live": The verb "live" can also be expressed by the verb "anak' a", "to be living" Naqhan is an agglunative language. For example naqhamat' (Naqan language) consists of the root -naq- (people), construct suffix -a-, and the root mat' (language). The noun c'x'ap'q (child) is formed of the root -c'x'- (man) and the root -ap'q- (small). Verbs can also be agglunated, for example vtaqhaq'aeno (he lives well) is formed of the class prefix v- (masculine), root -taqh- (good), suffix -aq'- (adverb marker), umlauted root -aen- (live), and the -o ending. The similar phrases can be said as zac'x'ab taqhaq'aeno (this man lives well), taqhanuh'an vo (his life is good), zac'x'oh'anuh'ab taqh vo (this man's life is good) vtaqhaq'anak' vo (he is living well), or zac'x'ab taqhaq'anak' vo (this man is living well). Now we'll analyze some of those examples.

Verbs
Complex verb structure (example verb vtaqhaq'aenabumako - if he will be living well...): The same phrase can be said as vtaqhaq'aenumak' vako.

Perfect verb form
The perfect is formed by adding -as- to the verb stem.

vtaqhaq'aenaso - he has lived well (already).

Future tense of verbs
The future tense is formed by adding -ak- or -nak- to the verb stem.

Past tense of verbs
The past tense of verbs is formed by adding -am- or -nam- to the verb stem. Example:

v-taqh-aq'-aen-o - he lives good

v-taqh-aq'-aen-am-o - he lived good.

Subjunctive mood
The subjunctive is made by adding -um- or -num- to the verb stem.

v-taqh-aq'-aen-um-am-o - if he had lived well...

Case system
The Naqhan language has 7 cases: absolutive, ergative, instrumental, dative, partitive, abessive, vocative. The ergative case can be used for both transitive and intransitive verbs.

The accusative case is used for past constructions. For example, the sentence C'x'ab bark' xmazama means "(That) man eats an apple", with c'x'a (man) in ergative case and bark' (apple) in absolutive. But "(That) man ate an apple" can be translated as C'x'a bark'an xmazama (absolutive-accusative), C'x'ab bark'an xmazama (tripartite), or C'x'ab bark' xmazama (ergative-absolutive).

Plural inflection
Plural inflection differs from singular. Also, the singular noun endings can be agglunated to the plural noun.

Construct state
The construct state is expressed by adding the -a- suffix to the owner noun and prefixing it to the possessed noun.

If the owner noun's last sound is q, it is aspirated.

If the owner noun's last sound is qh, it loses its aspiration.

If the possessed noun's beginning sound is a vowel, the suffix is -ah'-

If the owner noun's last sound is a vowel, the suffix is -h'a-.

If the suffix is placed between two vowels, it becomes -h'ah'-.

Possession
c'x'afi - my man

c'x'afa - your man

c'x'afo - his man

c'x'afu - his man

c'x'aha - our man

c'x'afta - your man

c'x'afka - their man

c'x'afe - their man

Definite article
The definite article is expressed by the prefix ba-: c'x'a - bac'x'a, pal - bapal, mat' - bamat'.

Postpositions
There is no locative case in Naqhan. There are postpositions instead. They are suffixed