Dïtavqxaj

SIDENOTE
The language is in progress, so don't interpret the state of the pages as it was shitpost, also I am new and don't speek English natively, so if you can help me with translations, you can modify the page or ask me. - MS

Vowels
ë /ə/ can't have any dipthongs:

Allophony
All alophonic rules are optionals, so also can be called Allophonic Dialectal Rules (ADR)

Voice Assimilation (VA)
A voiced sound before a voiceless one, voiced the second sound

Prenasalize Plosives (PNP)

A nasal-plosive sequence, articulates as a prenasalize stop regardless of voice

Aproximant-Vowel Interchanges (AVI)

Plosives and fricatives cause i, ï and u to mutate into y and w and can be palatalaizator and labializators

Phonotactics
The sylable structure is (O)(S)V(S)(O), when O stands for Obstruents, S is for Sonorants. V stand for vowel.

Some sylables have more than one vowel, creating a dipthong, that's because a sylable with no coda and another with no onset, merge together.

The maximum intervocalic consonant number is 3.

Also, the language has a feature called "place harmony":

It dishtinguish beetween Frontal and Dorsal consonants and syllables can't have both types of consonants at once

This cause that any prefix or sufix that have a consonant, to have two versions: A Frontal and a Dorsal

Inflections
All nouns doesn't inflect for number, gender or person. Instead there can have a article before than instead get's the inflection.

Derivation
Nouns can also be adverbs and both can be verbs or adjetives with the apropiate sufix

[-(u)ʃ, -(u)t ] "-(u)x, -(u)t" - Noun to Verb

[-(o)q, -(o)h] "-(o)q, -(o)h" - Noun to Adjective

Animacy
There are 8 types of animacy, each name will have a animacy class, but if the animacy class is needed to be other than the animacy it has, you can add prefixes to the referant:

Cases
SIDENOTE: the parenthesis denotes the relative word used depending on the case

Adjectives
All the Adjectives are derivate with the "Noun to Adjectives" suffix

Verbs
All the verbs are derivate with the "Noun to Verb" suffix, also the verbs can inflect by tense and verbal mood

S-O Describers
Are optionals:

Vowel Suffix
The first thing that is necesary to do is to put a vowel sufix, marking tense, direction and aspect.

Primary Case
Then the verb is modified with a verbal primary case sufix, the modal doesn't mark unless various vowel sufixes are needed (In the future, I won't look at the past=-uawí/uiwé)

Secondary Cases
Also, the verb can use a secondary case (it's optional), in this case the verbs class is used and can change: Change: Deductive Stative means "deduce that (person) is (time) being (verb)", also change to Pointed in Present Modal, and to Durative everywhere else

Change: Thinker Stative means "think that (person) is (time) being (verb)" as a suposition, also change to Pointed in Present Modal, and to Durative everywhere else

Change: Causative means "to cause (person) to (verb)", also changes to Pointed all types of verbs.

Questionary Sufixes
In questions, you need to put a questionary sufix

Evidentiallity
The verbs evidenciallity is optional, and its marked with gramatical particles that also can be glued by removing the first consonant.

Subjects and Objects
Template:

Relative Adjectival Names
If a word in a sentence is used as an adjective, the Absolute noun (a.k.a. the noun-like noun) is put in 1 of the 4 Genitive Poseser Cases, while the Relative Noun (a.k.a. the adjective-like noun) is put in the correspondent Genetive Posesed Case.

Linking Templates
Some templates or orations can be unified, using conjuntions

Alphasylabary
In the Alphasylabary, there are 2 types of characters:

Unitals (1 consonants) characters.

Dual (2 consonants) characters.


 * is a place holder for anything

The vowel diacritics are readed bottom to top, a.k.a.: the top diacritics put his vowel after the consonant and the bottom diacritics put his vowel before the consonant.

Dual characters are formed by puting a "header" char. and a "final" char.

Logography
Certain logographyc characters are used to encode consonant cluster