Yanüsaho/han

야느사호 아니 앛만 올 야느!

General information

 * cyr| - |lat|

Alphabet
all blocks contain initail and final consonant (exluding the - consonant blocks)

for example, 난 is read nan, people are expected to understand that 나 alone reads na.

Phonotactics
not a lot happens, syllables may be (C)V(V)(C), C being any consonant, V being any vowel

stress
Main stress is on the penultimate syllable (first syllable in monosyllabic or disyllabic words) if a word contains a diphthong it will have stress on that diphthong (e.g. sën ka vs. qi roi sëlu)

Nouns
There are multiple nouncases in Yanüsaho, the plural and indefenite cases can also be a part of the genitive, instumental and vocative cases. A word with indefenate case does not agree to number (singular/plural), so a word can either be, singular, plural or indefenite. The living/abstract/object distinction in instrumental and vocative cases are from Old Yanüsaho, which had that distinction in all nouns but remains in the least common cases. All nouns are count nouns (not mass nouns) so constructions like (“one corn” or “two papers” are allowed)

regular verbs on -i
Only the oblique person is used normally, this person includes everything. When a pronoun drop occurs the first or second person might be used. Passive verbs are verbs in the sentences where the passive voice occurs, the object replaces the subject, and the subject goes away (the object of the passive sentence in this case, is the subject of the active sentence.). Only if the 1st or 2nd person were the subject in the active sentence the verb conjugates to that person.

Verb particles
verb particles are combinable, there can occur multiple after a verb, they are free to shatter over the sentence, but cannot occur before the verb. (except for qen, which only occurs directly before the verb.)

Adjectives
regular adjectives end on n, though nothing happens to this ending. there is a particle inbetween the adjective(s) and the noun that shows their relation. The adjective also agrees to the nouncase. The vocative inclusive also agrees to the class of the noun. When the adjective particle contains the indef or vocative, a noun is not needed to express this anymore BUT it’s still very common to do express it. The <ㅎ> in the vocative particle is optional.