Aslyonian

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The Aslyonian | ɛs lɑjən niən | (Aslijoña) is an influenced language by the Malayan natives vocabulary ( aslo de Malayo) and the Spanish accent, along with Malayan language grammatical structure. But due to the development of modern Malayan language, Aslyonian slowly, too changed into a Spanish-like language with these vowels existing (a, e, i, o, u) and these consonants (b, c, d, f, g, h, j, l, ll, m, n, ñ, p, r, s, t, y, z). Take note that there are no k's, q's, v's, w's and x's in the Aslyonian consonant group. In other words, these consonants (k, q, v, w, x) had been, or had never been used in Old Aslyonian, but now no more in Modern Aslyonian.

Phonology
All the vowels in Aslyonian are the same as Spanish, but there are some differences in the consonant group. (g) is pronounced as |g| before (a, o, u), and | dʃ | before (e, i). While (s) is pronounced | ʃ | before vowels (e, i) and |s| before vowels (a, o, u) and at the end or in the middle of a word.

Also, (h) is silent in the case when a word ends with a consonant and continues with another word starting with (h), for e.g. una humano | ʊnɑ'ʊmɑno |(a human), the (h) is silent in humano. Whereas when an individual word or the previous word ends with a consonant, (h) is usually pronounced, for e.g. cis humano | sis hʊmɑno | (six human). (c) is pronounced |k| before vowels (a, o, u), and | s | before (e, i), for e.g. contras | kon trɑs | (contrast) and cibilizacion | si bi liʒɑ sjon | (civilization).

Verbal Statements and Question Statements
The sentence structure in Aslyonian language is easy. Just like Spanish, the main subject comes first, then only the rest of it.

In Aslyonian language, a statement with a verb has to be stressed with a word, do or zo at the end, and a question with a, da or za at the end of the sentence.

Simple statement: ''Aslijoña es una langua facil. ''(Aslyonian is an easy language.)

Verbal statement: Sao y abalazore le langua Aslijoña do. ( I am learning the Aslyonian language)

Question statement: Es tu abalazoros le langua Aslijoña 'da? '(Are you going to be learning the Aslyonian language?)

When to use do, da and when to use zo, za?
It's easy! Just use either do or zo, and da or za which you feel is most fluent when you speak. Most of the time, people use zo and za more than do and da.

Presente (Present Tense)
In present tense, the verb doesn't change, i.o.w. they remain the same.

Pasado (Past Tense)
In past tense, the verb gains an (a) if it ends with a consonant. Note that most of the verbs end with an (r) or an (n). In a most unlikely case, if a verb ends with a vowel, just add another same consonant, as it is before the vowel, at the end and add an (a), for e.g. mino | mi no | (drink), will be, minona | mi no nɑ | (drank). But this seldom occurs because only two out of a hundred verbs may have a vowel at the end.