Charangae

General information
Charangae (tʃäɾängæ; literally mediator speech) is the native language of the Hkenunengae (hke̞nune̞ngæ; literally mediator people). As the name suggests, the hkenunengae are a trading people, with many expert merchants and mediators due to their central location in the Ngaehbeha (ngæhbe̞xä; literally gold exchange) trade route. The Hkenunengae live on an archipelago in the middle of a vast ocean, making them the only stop for merchants to drop anchor in on their way to the other end of the ocean. Thus the Charangae language is relatively concise and focused on numbers and measurements.

Vowels
A dipthong can be formed between æ and i.

Alphabet
To be implemented when I have time to transfer to digital

Romanization
For the sake of convenience, the following IPA symbols shall be referred to as such:

Phonotactics
The standard syllable structure is CV, with C being a consonant or consonant cluster, and V being a vowel. In this case a "none" vowel still counts as a vowel. The only consonant clusters involve the consonants n, l, h, and the consonants d, b, t, g, k. The second group of consonants cannot exist without one of the three first group consonants preceding them. The consonants t and k are the only consonants eligible for a "none" vowel. The "none" consonant clusters can only be used at the end of a root/affix. The standalone consonants are as follows: m/n, l, h/x, zh, ch, f/ɸ, ŋ, and ɾ. The slashes indicate that the two consonants are allophones (only outside of consonant clusters), the left consonant can only be used at the beginning of a word, while the right consonant can only be used in the middle of the word. The declensions or conjugations attached are to be ignored in this rule. Adjectives are only allowed to have one syllable, and when forming compound words, the modifying root comes after the modified root and must be in diminutive form.

Tones/Pitch Accent
There are five tones, and they are only used on adjectives which are constrained to one syllable only. The rest of the words use a pitch accent system for a stress pattern, with the syllables sporting a consonant cluster getting the high pitch accent and the rest being low. The five tones are: neutral, high, rising, dipping, and falling. The neutral tone is said with a normal voice, while the high tone is said with a higher pitched voice like in Mandarin. The rising tone rises like the Cantonese rising tone, and the dipping tone can be compared to the Mandarin dipping tone, except it is always fully pronounced. The falling tone is identical to the Mandarin falling tone.

Word Order
The canonical word order for Charangae is Subject Object Verb, but the order can be changed while retaining the same meaning because of the case identifying prefixes for nouns.

Genders
There are two gender distinctions, animate and inanimate. The animate gender root usually has a pitch accented consonant cluster as the end syllable. The inanimate gender root usually has a pitch accented consonant cluster as the beginning syllable. Abstractions and actions technically are in the inanimate gender, but they are not bound by the consonant cluster rule.

Nouns
The nouns are usually multisyllabic to contrast the monosyllabic adjectives. The are declined in this manner: (case indicator) (root) (number indicator). With each case indicator there is a different location the noun takes in a sentence. The root for person/entity mundae, and the present progressive conjugated copula htichindifu shall be used to illustrate the mechanics of declension. In instances where the coda is unusable, the present progressive conjugated verb htichinbaeina shall be used, the root of which means to give. For possession, the generic name lkanaht will be used.

Pronouns
The pronouns differentiate by gender and by person. There are three persons: first, second, and third. The pronouns are also subject to declension.

Verbs
The verbs are also multisyllabic to contrast the monosyllabic adjectives. They are conjugated in this manner: (tense, aspect, and polarity) (root) (mood). The conjugation shall be illustrated with the verb root nbaeina, meaning to give.

Tense/Aspect/Polarity
To change the polarity to negative just add zhaei to the end of the conjugation.

Mood
The generic name lkanaht, the noun root mundae meaning person/entity, and the conjunction lbe meaning if are used to assist in the illustration along with the aforementioned verb root. For the potential mood, the la is extended in a similar manner and tone in which Cantonese places an ah after sentences.

Copula
The only copula of Charangae is ndifu, which is akin to desu in Japanese or to be in English.