Alisian/Dictionary

Abbrivation in this Lexicon
In order to notify the properties of the words faster, I chose abbrivations. Here's some you will see:
 * A. -Accusative
 * D. -Dative
 * F. -Femiline
 * M. -Masculine
 * Ne. -Neuter
 * No. -Nominative
 * P. -Plural
 * R. -Reflexive
 * S. -Singular

Pronouns

 * 1) ja, mi, ti, si, li, la, lo becomes j', t', s', l', l', l' before a vowel.
 * 2) ile, ela, ono are the 3rd person pronouns corresponding to he, she and it respectively. The pronouns ile and ela can also mean it around inanimate objects since they describe masculine and feminine. ono is it naturally but only for neuter nouns.

2nd person pronouns
In the past, the T-V distinction was part of the language (with T tou as informal and V voy as formal).

Generally speaking, tou is the familiar form of address used with family, friends, and minors. Voi indicates distance without deference, and tends to be used between people who are, roughly, social equals. domul / damula (literally "sir"/"madam") are the most ceremonious forms of address. English speakers may find the latter construction akin to the parliamentary convention of referring to fellow legislators in the third person (as "my colleague", "the gentleman", "the member", etc.), although the level of formality conveyed by senhor is not as great. In fact, variants of domul and damula with more nuanced meanings such as professor ("professor"), colèg ("colleague") and patre ("father") are also employed as personal pronouns.

In modern day speech, the T-V distinction no longer exist after the seventeenth century, when formality in pronouns were lost. Ultimately, the second person pronouns are used according to number of people being addressed. e.g. Touwodi le comete hir sor?(Did you (sing.) the comet lest night?) vs Voy woditi le comete hir sor?(Did you (pl.) the comet lest night?)

Verbs

 * †: irregular
 * ‡: stem-changing