Katremenskoj

Overview

=Setting= Katremenskoj is based upon Croatian, Bosnian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Romanian, Greek, Albanian, Turkish, Arabic, Hungarian and Latin!

=Alphabet= When there are two sounds at a letter, look in the notes below! In order to save time, I wrote capital letters only! I think everyone knows the minuscule letters!

A (a)

B (b)

C (ts)

Č (tʃ)

D (d)

Đ (dʒ)

E (ɛ)

Ë (ə)

F (f) G (g)

H (x, h)

I (i)

J (j)

K (k)

L (l)

M (m)

N (n)

O (o)

P (p)

Q (k)

R (r, ɹ)

S (s)

Š (ʃ)

T (t)

U (u)

V (v)

W (v) see notes

X (ks)

Y (i, j)

Z (z)

Ž (ʒ)

NOTES:

H: Pronounced /x/ when before a consonant, /h/ elsewhere!

R: /ɹ/ before and after Ë, /r/ elsewhere!

W: Never used in everyday language, other than product names, surnames and city names!

Y: Used in English loanwords such as rugby! Also used in family names! Pronounced /i/ at the end of a word, /j/ elsewhere! There are exceptions which you might figure out yourself!

=Basic Grammar= Katremenskoj is an SOV (Subject Object Verb) language! In order to make a sentence you got to know who you're talking about and how many persons you're talking about!

Article
U- is used at nouns starting with a vowel! Ul- is used at nouns starting with a consonant! The word for a/an/one is in/ine! In is used when the following noun starts with a vowel and ine is used when the following noun starts with a consonants!

Examples:

U-bicikla (The bicycle)

Ul-avtomobila (The car)

Nouns
Nounds in singular form end with a, with a few exceptions! Plurals are made by putting k after a! When making plural of a word not ending with a, you put ak at then end instead! When telling how many of the noun there are, you never use the plural form! You just say the number nouns! If you say noun the number you're talking about cardinal numbers! We will get into numbers in a moment!

Examples:

Muzikala (Musical)

U-muzikala (The musical)

Muzikalak (Musicals)

U-muzikalak (The musicals)

Adjectives
Adjectives always end with i, with one exception (vërlo, a lot)! Adjectives are always placed after nouns and names! The only time an adjective is put before the noun is when someone does something something! The adjective can be stronger by putting v and c at the end of the word!

Examples:

Grosi (Big)

Grosiv (Bigger)

Grosic (Biggest)

Zoga sunci (Yellow bird)

U-zoga sunci (The yellow bird)

Zogak sunci (Yellow birds)

U-zogak sunci (The yellow birds)

Vërlo Jan tetrato (Jan works a lot)

Jan grosi tetrato (Big Jan works)

Jan grosi telo (Jan is big)

U-grada mari Marija tepinđo (Marija paints the town blue)

Verbs
Verbs always ends with o and they're always at the end of the sentence, unless the sentence contains one of the four semi-verbs!

Here they are (along with their stronger forms):

Ast, astev, astec (Will, would, would)

Dum, dumev, dumec (Have to, had to, had to)

Bisme, bismev, bismec (Shall, should, should)

Žele, želev, želec (Want to, wanted to, wanted to)

When one of those words is used in a sentence they're always after the verb!

In order to make a verb you'll have to know the 6 pronouns! Those are:

Ja - I

Ti - You

Te - He/she/it

No - We

Vo - You

Ni - They

You put the pronoun at the beginning of the verb in order to tell whom is doing what!

Examples:

Sladaki jalo (I'm cute)

Ako glupi tilo žele, solbi tilo dum! (If you wanna be dumb, you have to be tough)

Transforming nation names into nouns, adjective and languages
In order to transform a nation name into a noun, adjective or language you have to know the spelling and what letters to remove! Here's how it works:

-IJA/-DIJA:

When a nation name ends with IJA, you just remove IJA and replace it with one of the endings I'll show you later! When ending with DIJA just remove DIJA!

-LANDA:

Remove LANDA when describing a noun or adjective, remove DA when desribing adjective and language!

-NJA:

When a nation name ends with NJA you always remove the JA!

-SKA:

Remove SKA end replace it with one of the endings! When it ends with CKA remove the KA and replace C with T! The exception of this is when describing human adjective and language! See endings below!

Other endings:

Other rules

The endings:

None = Nation name

-a = Nationality (noun)

-i = Nationality (adjective)

-ski = Nationality (adjective, everything that's he/she/it only)

-skoj = language

Sweden = Švédija

Swede = šveda

Swedish = švedi

Swedish = švedski

Swedish = švedskoj

Finland = Finlanda

Finn = fina

Finnish = fini

Finnish = finski

Finnish = finskoj

France = Franska

Frenchman = frana

French = frani

French = franski

French = franskoj

Spain = Spanja

Spaniard = spana

Spanish = spani

Spanish = spanski

Spanish = spanskoj

India = Baracka

Indian = barata

Indian = barati

Indian = baracki

Indian = barackoj

Numbers
The number system is really easy! Let's start with 1-10!

1 In/ine

2 Dva

3 Tri

4 Kvadrë (Kvad)

5 Pet

6 Čest

7 Set

8 Okt

9 Nov

10 Dek

By adding numbers between 1 and 9 you can make the number slightly bigger!

Eleven is dekin (ten one)

By changing the first digit of 10 you can make the number up to 9 times bigger!

10 to 90 is dek, dvadek, tridek, kvadek, petek, čestek, setek, oktek, novdek! And again, if you want to make the number slightly bigger you add a digit between 1 and 9!

33 is tridektri for instance!

When speaking of 100 (cent) it's the same! Changing 1 to an another number makes it x times bigger!

105 is centpet!

And everything else is the same when it comes to adding smaller numbers!

123 is centdvadektri!

Thousand (mil) isn't as hard either! Just add what ever number between 1 and 999 you feel like and you're ready to go!

Also, if you want to add smaller numbers, use the three zeros and add a number between 1 and 999!

999,999 is novcentnovdeknovmilnovcentnovdeknov!

When it comes to millions and billions it's up to you to figure it out!

Cases
Katremenskoj uses 15 cases! 11 of them are used to mark where something is!

Locative cases: Ablative (movement from) buildings and geo. -en

Adessive (at) things and geo. -ob

Apudessive (next to) things and geo. -lošt

Delative (movement from) things and people                                       -ruž

Elative (out of) buildings and geo. -hoj

Exessive (from) transforming from one thing to an another, adjective and nouns   -nost

Illative (into) buildings and geo. -znat

Inessive (in) buildings and geo. -al

Lative (movement towards) geo. -hul

Subessive (below) things and buildings                                           -pod

Translative (to) transforming from one thing to an another, adjective and nouns  -kap

Adpositional cases: Dative (to) things to someone, stronger than for                                 -par

Distributive-temporal (tid) how often something happen                           -bel

Possessive (owning)                                                              -strom/-trom

Other cases: Multiplicative (times) how many times something happen                           -ner

When adding cases to the words they're used for you separate the word from the case by using a hyphen (-)! The only time the word and the case are together without hyphen is when using the possessive case!

The 6 pronouns can be added to the possessive case in order to make the words my, your, his/her/its, our, your and their!

=Dictionary= Under construction

=Example text= Zdravej! Simon jalo i Švédija jarigino!

(Hi! My name is Simon and I'm from Sweden!)