Mopo Kaf

is a constructed fictional language invented by Stephen F. Boque used for the people of Caf. Mopo Kaf literally means "Word Caf" but a more clearer definition is "Language of Caf". Other names for this conlang can be Mopo Desijo, Kap Mopo, and Pargio no Mopota. This was created for analytical use. It is used by writting latin letters.

History
At Seventh Grade, Stephen invented a conlang which would or might be spread into his City which was speaking a language that kinda lacks freedom of expression. But then for a week he put it aside and start building others. But after building others, he lost all his inspiration and one night, turned back to Mopo Kaf and realized how it was great! So, he revived it and added more words.

Phonology
Inspired from toki pona's phonology. Mopo Kaf's 14 consonants, 5 vowels, and a diphtong makes it balance simple and complex.

Consonants
Nasal consonants are m and n. Stop consonants are p and b, t and d , and k and g. Fricative consonants are f, s and h. Trilled consonant which is only r. Approximant consonants l and j/y/.

Vowels
Mopo Kaf has only five vowels and a diphtong. These are a, e , i , o , u , and io.

Vocabulary
Inspired again from toki pona, it has 'mi' as the pronoun 'I' and 'sina' as a pronoun for 'you'. For nouns, the basic parts of an object is important. It has words for 'base', 'support', and others.

It's verbs are specific in what it means like having the word for 'switch' is different from the word for 'relocate'. Adjectives aren't developed yet due to the creator's heavy thinking to choose the right words to fit it's respective meanings. [Currently, Mopo Kaf's vocabulary contains 115 words yet. The creator expects to let Mopo Kaf's vocabulary to have atleast 300 words.]

Grammar
Well, like Pegakibo, the adjective should be used after the word it describes. Example of this is translating the phrase, "The Five things". The phrase is translated as "Jijota kop te", which means "thingplural 5 the".

At every Verb, the word at the left is the doer and the word from the right is the receiver. Example is, "He listens to you". Is translated into, "Pepo kap sina" or "third-person listen you".

Sample Text
(yet to be edited)