Vesës

Classification and Dialects
Vesiun is the official language of the small tropical kingdom of Veiss. It is the modern colloquial form of the liturgical language of Lanaism, the major religion of the Vesiun people. The country being located at the bottom of the Misse Peninsula has caused the phonology to be heavily influenced by Ancient Missean and Sorvian. It is agglutinative, but words fuse together and cause the language to be considered polysynthetic. The basic word order is SVO.

Consonants

 * All other consonants are written as their symbols on the IPA (except for "r"; see allophony)

Vowels

 * All other vowels are written as their symbols on the IPA

Phonotactics

 * Words almost always begin with a consonant
 * The letter "r" cannot begin a word
 * "ck" (/q/) only ever comes at the end of a syllable or word

Allophony

 * The letter "r" has th ree different pronunciation depending on context: /ɹ/ when preceded by a vowel and followed by a consonant, /r/ when preceded by a consonant (that is part of the same word) and followed by a vowel, and /ɾ/ in any other unspecified situation.
 * "oi" is pronounced like a nasal "wa;" "oui" is pronounced /oi/.
 * Any "i" and "ï" next to eachother in a word fuse together into one "i"

A "t" at the end of a word sometimes behaves differently:
In all other cases it is pronounced.
 * -et/-ët -- pronounced "ei"/"ëi"
 * -aat -- pronounced "ai"
 * -it/-ît -- "t" becomes silent

Stress
Stress always falls on the initial syllable and/or the syllable following a glottal stop: ĆÖnïva'ACKën

Writing System
 * This section is here if I or anyone reading this comes up with a writing system. It would most likely be an alphabet or abugida.

All words in Vesiun have specific endings and stems based off of those endings (c = consonant, v = vowel):

 * -it/-ît -- drops "t"
 * -aat -- becomes "ai"
 * -oi -- "oi" drops entirely (sometimes add "e"/"ë")
 * -vch -- becomes v'vck (pach to pa'ack)
 * -ń -- becomes "nin"/"nïn"
 * -svs -- becomes šv
 * -zvz -- becomes žv
 * -cvc -- final consonant swaps places with vowel and if vowel is "e," "ē," or "i," it becomes "ï" (jòlim to jòlmï)
 * -ën -- add "e" (södën to södëne)
 * -lcv -- drops consonant (pilka to pila)
 * -ag/-äg -- becomes -äge/-ägë
 * -et/-ët -- becomes -enï/-ënï
 * -vet (v =/= vowel in this case) -- becomes "veni"

Nouns
Nouns have a handful of cases as well as a plural form. Suffixes are appended to the noun's stem to form a case. Here are the most common ones:
 * Inessive vs. Locative: inessive emphasizes INSIDE, locative is more vague. Locative is more common and has a broader use

There are also possessive suffixes:

Pronouns
There are two main sets of pronouns: subject direct object, and indirect object pronouns. The direct and indirect objective cases are never used of pronouns.