Lomev

Lomev
Lomev has some borrowed features and words from Russian and Irish. Spoken in Western Cothccus, Lomev has a rich history and has 3 daughter languages. In some dialects of Lomev, the r is tapped.

Phonology
Lomev consists of 17 distinct sounds, with 11 consonant sounds and 6 vowel sounds with only 3 letters for the vowels. The way a vowel is pronounced is based on the consonant that comes before it. The sounds mostly resemble the sounds in English minus a few.

Grammar
Lome's basic word order is VSO. Verbs conjugate based on the person, and partly by the tense. The tense of the verb is a separate word, but is grammatically incorrect without the tense. Adjectives and adverbs are one word. If you say something is tall, than it can be described as being tall, or being tall as in an adverb. No modifiers are needed to differentiate whether or not the adverb is an adjective or vis versa because the rest of the sentence will tell you. Vowels

Phonotactics
There is no general syllable order because each part of speech typically follow a different syllable order. Each word does not follow this specific order, but is most common. "Almost all words start with a consonant. In a few cases some words will start with a vowel. i.e."

Writing System
Lomev can be written using the Latin Alphabet, but is supposed to be written in the Lomev Alphabet. "Lomev's Alphabet has three vowels written and six vowel sounds. Depending on what consonant is in front of the vowel, it changes the sound." "To change the sound of the vowel, add the same consonant to change the vowel."

Verbs & Tenses
There are 4 verb tenses, past, future, and present indefinite and declarative. Verbs always have to have tenses, if a verb has no tense before or after it, that phrase would be grammatically incorrect. "The present tense indefinite indicates the subject has the capability to do said verb, but is not currently doing the verb.""There are 6 different verb conjugations, I, you, we, it, they, and you(formal). Of the verbs, there are infinitive and definite verbs, all infinitive verbs end in -t, and mostly follow a CVCVC pattern, all definite verbs tell us who is doing it, and when. Verbs are conjugated based on who or what is doing the action. There are six different subjects or verb endings in Lomev. Gender is not a concept in Lomev, so he, she, and it are all one word."