Míbvui

General information
Míbvui is the official language of Milibaut, a small country of about 5 million people. It is part of the Camithic ( Míbvui: Caxmíthíc) language family, and part of the Míbvui sub family. It is the most direct descendant of Proto-Camithic, and therefore remains most of its inflections and has a some what similar vocabulary (aséte > sté, "I", zumia > suma, "human").

Consonants
Notes (still being tweeked)

1. /θ/ becomes [ð] when it is at the end of a word

2. /ʃ/ becomes [ʒ] when followed by /i/

3. /ç/ becomes [ʐ] at the beginning of words

4. /ɲ/ becomes [n] where preceded by a vowel and followed by an a

5. Plosives becomes aspirated when not the beginning or final letter in a word

6. /v/ becomes [ɸ] when it is the last letter of a word

7. /ɸ/ becomes [v] when followed by /e/ or /ɛ/

8. /n/, /t/, /d/, and /s/ become [nʷ], [tʷ], [dʷ], and [sʷ] when followed by /ɐ/

9. When /ɹ/ ends the stem of a word, the last vowel sound is placed after it

Alphabet
The actual alphabet of Míbvui is a script that can not be typed. The following is a transcrption called the Trate transcription. Míbvui is phonetic, every letter gets pronounced. Changes with 

Placing  next to certain vowels changes their sound.  was chosen in this transcription because it is the closest to the letter in the native script that causes these sound changes. These sound changes must be memorized.  always affects the vowel that precedes it. The position of the vowel in the word also affects the change.

Stress
In words that end with vowels, stress is usually placed on the last vowel. However, if the letter before the last vowel is also vowel, then stress is placed on the second to last vowel. If a word ends with a consonant, stress is placed on the first vowel, unless a word is more than 4 syllables long. Then stress is placed on the 2nd vowel.

Syllable
(C)(C)V(C)(C)

/h/, /j/, and /ʎ/ may not end a syllable or a word