Agirowen

Agirowen (or in its syllabary, Yag.gir.row.wen) is a conversational language that evolved from a parametric magical language (and can still be used as one). It is one of three languages natively spoken in the magical kingdom of Chinereya, and is also spoken by Binding Batteries (and their fans) even outside of Chinereya, especially as a supplement to English when trying to explain complex magical concepts.

Classification and Dialects
Of the three languages natively spoken in Chinereya (Agirowen, Bisgyupers, and New Argon), Agirowen is mainly distinct for its very consistent CVC syllable structure (it is said aloud as "Yag gir row wen"). It has a lot of very regular patterns, and has more strict standardized in territories that speak it than the other two languages. Because of this, Agirowen often comes off as having a certain scholarly formality or high society feeling to it. Also, it is natively written using a runic syllabary-abuguida, unlike how the other two langs are natively written with logograms.

The main dialectual differences for Agirowen are:

 /ħ/ vs /j/  and    or  /tʃ/ vs /k/

with  /ħ/ and  /k/ being more typical for inner city speak and cities closer to the capital, and with  /j/ and  /tʃ/ being more typical in villages or on the fringes of territories for which Agirowen is the official language. (referenced orthography is for the Romanization used by Binding Batteries, who tend to prefer writing in a Human script rather than a Chinereyan one).

Phonotactics
CVC syllable structure only. If an Agirowen word (such as the name itself) is written in a way that doesn't look CVC somewhere, that is due to written stylization, and such words are still pronounced with only CVC syllables. The native script is a runic syllabary-abuguida that is designed to handle CVC syllables only. When a consonant is missing at the start or the end of a word/syllable, the missing consonant is by default an implicit 'y'.

Some syllables are reserved for grammatical particles (sometimes referred to as "word role suffixes" in informal explanations, but technically they act more like particles than suffixes). The max size of a word is five "stem" syllables and two "word role suffix" syllables. The minimum size is two syllables. The vast majority of words have either two or three "stem" syllables and one "word role suffix" syllable.