Vigia

Classification and Dialects
Vigia is the language of the Figanese People in the country Figania. It influenced its neighbor country, Kappai, and is also influenced by it. The influences made some changes in the language Vigia like the word for "I" is "sif" in Kapaupa (Official Language of Kappai) but "shif" in Vigia. This language has no dialects probably because speech changes happen together because the country of Figania is relatively small.

Phonotactics
This is how I will represent tones for this part: "toneA"-"toneB"-"toneC", For example, i'm gonna represent "High tone" as tone 4, "Middle tone" as tone 3, "Middle to Low to High tone" as tone 3-2-4, and vice versa.

Here are the phonotactics in how each neighboring phonemes will interact and create tones. Only phonemes that are at the same syllable and are adjacent to one another are the only ones that we will consider as "neighbors" (PS: Only vowels are the ones that can be tonalized): It represented graphically, it will look like this: Since the final arrow paths only has 1 path, this means that tones does not really convey any vocabularic info. Tones are usually for mood, like how we know if someone is angry. This is only used if the mood is neutral or normal. High tones are usually used for happiness, Low tones for sadness, Complex AND Low tones for scared, Complex AND High tones for feeling competitive, Complex ONLY for neutral also, and many more.
 * 1) If a vowel is between 2 consonants then descend
 * 2) If the consonant to the left is voiceless then descend. If not, make the tone to tone 2
 * 3) If the consonant to the right is voiceless too, make the tone to tone 3. If not, make the tone to tone 3-4
 * 4) If a vowel is at the right of a consonant then descend
 * 5) If the consonant is voiceless, make the tone to tone 3-4-3. If not, make the tone to tone 4
 * 6) If a vowel is at the left of a consonant then descend
 * 7) If the vowel is High or High-mid, follow the rule at 2.1. If not, make the tone to tone 4

Writing System
Vigia uses a Syllabary, or Si᷈sātsá (SʂἎTʂ) that makes each consonant-vowel pair syllable 1 glyph. To make a CVC or VCV syllable, just stick one unpaired vowel/consonant glyph. It's pretty tricky to tell if the consonant came first before the vowel or the other way around. To combat this, we added 2 symbols to signify what does came first: ж (if consonants came first) and ҹ (if vowel came first). An example of use of these symbols are these: жϸϸҹѢ (pronounced as "ba-ba-ob"), ҹҬжԎϸΩ (pronounced as "ot-ta-ba-u"). If you wan't to remove [t] and [d] in [tʃ] and [dʒ] to get [ʃ] and [ʒ], there a symbol to remove those pesky "stoppifiers". The symbol is ễ, for example: ễᶘἎГ (pronounced as "shang"). And the symbol for binding 2 syllables to one is Ἆ.

There are also words that only have one symbol, usually coming from Kapaupa, these are called Ha᷄̄nsi᷈sātsá (hἎnSʂἎTʂ)

Lexicon
We will write the words as how they are normally spelled if spelled in English (That means, they are not written is the Vigia syllabary and have no tones added).