Medjo-dore

Mes-anto is a planned auxiliary language that combines characteristics of Esperanto, Ido, English, Japanese and other ethnic languages. There are two dialects of the language. Low Mes-anto and High Mes-anto.

General information
Mes-anto is an analitic language, without grammatical genres for asexual entities and no conjugation of variable verbs by person or number.

Its simple grammar is complete. The language is in the construction phase of the vocabulary, being based on the most varied languages on the planet.

Mes-anto means "mediator", "the one who mediates".

Writing
Mes-anto uses Latin alphabet with a total of 26  letters and 6 digraphs.

General information
Mes-anto is an agglutinating language, without grammatical genres for asexual entities, without conjugation of variable verbs by person or number, in addition to having a reduced number of phonemes to facilitate learning.

Articles
There is only one definite article, "ay," which equals "the".

Accentuation
All words are paroxystones except accented ones, which are proparoxytones: dámino, íkito, júsuta, búsuki, etc.

Adjectives
All adjectives end in -a. They are invariant in gender and number:

Beya domo - beautiful house; beya domoy - beautiful houses;

Beya kotxo - beautiful car; beya kotxoy - beautiful cars.

The same goes for the possessive pronouns:

Ma woko - my work; ma ojoy - my eyes.

Nouns and pluralization
All nouns end in -o and are essentially neutral.

They vary in number by adding -y to form plurals:

Domo - house, domoy - houses;

Kotxo - car; kotxoy - car;

To - thou; toy - ye;

Ho - he; hoy - they.

Nominal Pronouns
All nominal pronouns end in -o. There are no differences between oblique or straight set cases. There are two pronouns of the first person plural:
 * Notes

Wo - The inclusive we. Refers to the sender(s) and receiver(s) as well.

Noso - The exclusive we. Refers only to the sender(s), excluding the receiver(s).

Ex:

"- Wo gone-goi adaw sinemo nuna-bakw-eno." (We will go to the movies today.)

"- No! Noso gone-goi adaw gone sinemo nuna-bakw-eno! To no!" (No! We will go to the movies today! You do not!)

Possessive pronouns
Possessive pronouns are the adjectives of nominal pronouns and may come before the object of possession in the form of adjectives (ma, ta, xa, etc.) or through the phrase "daw-nominal pronoun":

"Diso nune-esi ma bibyo. Disa bibyo nune-esi daw-to!"

"This is my book. This book is yours!"

Demonstrative pronouns (dato / data / diso / disa)
There're two demonstrative pronouns:

data/dato - "that"

disa/diso - "this"

They can be used as nouns:

"Ma kotxo nune-esi dato" - "My car is that"

"Nosa hundo nune-esi diso" - Our dog is this"

Or as adjetivs:

"Data kotxo nune-esi ay daw-mo" - " That car is mine"

"Disa hundo nune-esi daw-noso" - "This dog is ours"

Verbs
All verbs end in -i. They are always in the infinitive. Adverbs of time or mode are used to indicate the verb tense.

Example (in third person):

Adverbs
All adverbs end in -e.

Interrogative
The adverb "kye" is used to indicate that it is a question:

"To kye nune-esi bone ?" - "Are you ok?"

"Kye mode nune-esi to?" - "How are you?"

"To kye nune-meqnukai hundoy?" - "Do you LIKE dogs?"

"Kye to nune-meqnukai hundoy?" - "Do YOU like dogs?", "Are you the one who likes dogs?"

"To nune-meqnukai kye hundoy?" - "Do you like DOGS?", "Do you like... dogs???"

"To nune-meqnukai hundoy kye?" "Do you like dogs?" (no intonation)

Usually, the adverb "kye" comes before the main verb.

Prepositions
All prepositions end in -aw.

Conjunctions
All conjunctions end in -u.

Affixes
The affixes - prefixes and suffixes - are used to form derived words. They must always be connected to the radicals through hyphens: xo-homo, bakw-eno, ne-beya, y-eno, etc.

Prefixes
xo - means her, female. It is used to form female leads:

homo -person, xo-homo - woman;

hundo - dog, xo-hundo - female dog;

xo-ekwo - mare.

Equivalent to the suffix -ino of Esperanto and Ido.

ho - means him, male. It is used to form male leads:

homo - person, ho-homo - man;

hundo - dog, ho-hundo - male dog;

ho-ekwo: horse.

Equivalent to the suffix -ulo of Ido.

ne - means no, negatively. It is used to give opposite idea of the radical:

beya - beautiful; ne-beya - ugly;

uda - possible, ne-uda - impossible.

Suffixes
-en - It comes from "ene", "continuously". It is used to form words that demonstrate continuous action:

bakwi - to roll, to turn; bakwo - wheel, bakw-eno - rotation;

yi - to affirm, yo - yes, affirm; y-eno - affirmation.

Numerals
1 uno

2 duo

3 tio

4 kwato

5 kinto

6 sixo

7 seto

8 ókuto

9 nono

10 deko

11 deko uno

12 deko duo

13 deko tio

14 deko kwato

15 deko kinto

16 deko sixo

17 deko seto

18 deko ókuto

19 deko nono

20 duo-dekoy

21 duo-dekoy uno

30 tio-dekoy

40 kwato-dekoy

50 kinto-dekoy

60 sixo-dekoy

70 seto-dekoy

80 ókuto-dekoy

90 nono-dekoy

100 kento

200 duo-kentoy

1.000 mio

2.000 duo-mioy

1.000.000 miono

10.000.000 deko-mionoy

100.000.000 kento-mionoy

200.000.000 duo-kentoy-mionoy

1000000000 biono

1000000000000 tiono

4.672.561.483.719 kwato-tionoy sixo-kento-seto-deko-duo-bionoy kinto-kentoy-sixo-dekoy-uno-mionoy kwato-kentoy-ókuto-dekoy-tio-mioy seto-dekoy-deko-nono

Colors
ako - red

banao - brown

gweno - green

huiseo - grey

kyano - blue

nigo - black

owanjo - orange

xanto - yellow

xiono - violet

wayto - white

woso - pink

Vocabulary
Our Father

Nosa Ho-oyo

Nosa Ho-oyo antu nune-esi inaw ay Sukayo

Ta nómino debe-esi santi-eda

Ta kwingao debe-komi adaw noso

Ta wano debe-esi meyki-eda

Mode inaw ay Geo, ide inaw ay Sukayo

Nosa ekumeko daw ómina bakw-eno, To debe-doni adaw noso disa-bakw-ene

To debe-dimiti nosa débitoy mode noso nune-dimiti nosa débit-antoy.

To ne debe-deji noso kadi inaw tent-eno.

Butu To debe-sawi noso odaw mawo. Ameno.