Shinsali

Vowels
Vowels can form closing and opening diphthongs with /j/ and /w/.

Alphabet
Aspiration is marked with with ‹h› and ejective consonants are marked with ‹'›, both following the basic glyph. Consonants that can be written preceeding both of ‹h› or ‹'› are ‹p c ċ k t ṭ›.

Phonotactics
The syllable structure is simple (C)V(C). There are no consonant clusters.

Verbs
Shinsali verbs are very complex. They are aspect- and mood-heavy, but have no morphological tense. Verbs of motion, as with many languages, are more complex than other verbs. In Shinsali, verbs of motion indicate deictic information as well as indicating the shape of the object in motion. Verbs are almost exlusively prefixing but verbs of motion take on suffixes to indicate other infomation, such as deictal suffixes and a suffix indicating the shape of the object in motion. However, some deictal infomation is indicated in a prefix directly before the verb stem.

Mood prefixes
Moods in Shinsali are unique in that every mood has a negative form, for example, the negative indicative translates to "not" in English, the negative imperative translates to "Don't ___!", and so on. However, there is no negative dubitative mood.