Necarasso Cryssesa

Classification and Dialects
Necarasso Cryssesa is not based on any natural or constructed languages.

Consonants
note:
 * /sj/ -> [ʃ]; /tj/ -> [tʃ]; /ɹj/ -> /j/
 * /si/ -> [ʃi]; /ti/ -> [tʃi]
 * phonemes with asterisks cannot occur word-initially
 * unvoiced consonants are aspirated

Vowels
note:
 * [e] and [ɛː] are allophonic
 * [o] and [ɔː] are allophonic
 * long vowels for /e/, /a/, and /o/ occur word-finally, or before a vowel, approximant, or lateral fricative

Phonotactics
The basic form for a word is usually C_0(NC)*N_t. C_0 is a consonant, N is short for AVA (A, in turn, is an approximant or a nasal) and N_t is an ending. The only permitted endings (accounting for palatalization) are -a, -e, -i, -o, -as, -es, -is, -os, -ys, -an, -en, -on, -yn, -ja, -jo, -jas, -jos, -jan, -jon, -ass, -ess, -yss, -erss, -el, -yl, -ad, and -yd.

Writing System

 * * devoiced word-finally

Nouns
Nouns are declined by number and case.

Number declensions
Number declensions are applied before case declensions.

Case declensions
Oblique case is marked by changing the final consonant to , or adding <-n> to a vowel-final word.

Noun constructs
Constructs (nerillyr; sing. neri) can substitute certain postpositional phrases. There are fourteen such constructs in the language.

Verbs
Verbs follow one of five conjugation patterns.

Because the full conjugation tables are large (they can be accessed here), this entry will give the patterns used to create such tables.

Indicative mood
The nine endings for verbs ending in -ad are:

-a, -es, -e, -an, -esen, -en, -ess, -er, -i (corresponding to 1SG, 2SG, 3SG, 1DU, 2DU, 3DU, 1PL, 2PL, 3PL, respectively)

The nine endings for -yd verbs can be generated from this transformation on the final vowel: a <-> e; i <-> o. Therefore, they are:

-e, -as, -a, -en, -esan, -an, -ass, -ar, -o

These endings are used in the indicative mood.

Verbs ending in -ead or -ayd may result in double vowels. Separate them with .

Subjunctive mood
An infix is placed between the verb stem and the person-number ending. It is <-en-> for -ad verbs and <-es-> for -yd verbs.

For the dual number and verbs not ending in -ayd, the three endings instead are -era, -eres, and -ere (for -ad verbs) or -ere, -eras, -era (for -yd verbs). For those ending in -ayd, only the second-person dual ending is changed (to -enas).

Imperative mood
-ad verbs:

Singular and plural: the <-en-> infix is replaced with <-ent->

Dual: the  of the ending is changed to 

-yd verbs:

Singular and plural: the <-es-> infix is replaced with <-et->, but in the first-person singular the infix is instead <-ep->

Dual: the  of the ending is changed to , but in the first-person, the <-es-> infix is also <-ep>

-ayd verbs:

The <-es-> infix is replaced with <-et->, but in the first-person singular, first-person dual, and second-person dual, the infix is instead <-ep->.

Interrogative mood
Verbs not ending in -ead or -ayd:

Same as indicative

-ead verbs:

First person singular and dual: -ea -> -ia; -ean -> -ian

Third-person plural: -ei -> -i

-ayd verbs:

First person singular and dual: -ae -> -ie, -aen -> -ien

Second-person dual: -aesan -> -iesan

Third-person plural: -ao -> io

Essyd (to exist)
The verb essyd (to exist) conjugates irregularly:
 * indicative: ve, ves, vella, ven, vesen, vellan, veass, vellar, von
 * subjunctive: vese, vesas, vellesa, vesen, vesenes, vellesan, vehesass, vellesar, veson
 * imperative: vepe, vetas, velleta, vepen, vepenes, velletan, vehetass, velletar, veton
 * interrogative: ce, ces, cella, cen, cesen, cellan, ceass, cellar, gon