Qḱptt͜kt͜kp͜kk

Classification and Dialects
Qḱptct́ḱp [ꝃkʰpt͡ktʰkʰp] is a language with absolutely no vowels, and a very non-standard consonant set.

Phonotactics
Qḱptt͜kt͜kp͜kk uses a phonorun system.

Basically, the first letter puts the syllable in three categories, one based on the place, another on the manner, and the last on realization.

So a syllable starting with r has the alveolar, trill and non-aspirated categories.

The next letter must have at least one category which is the same as the first, but not all three. If another letter is added, it must agree in one way with both previous letters, but cannot be the same.

So [r̥t] is a valid phonorun, but **[r̥tʙ̥] is not because "t" has the plosive category, even though "r" has the trill category, so the trill category was forbidden after the 2nd sound.

You can't repeat a sound used previously in the phonorun at any point.

If all 3 categories are forbidden or the next sound should be forbidden, then the phonorun ends.

Romanisation
Use " ` (accent)" or "h" after a consonant to aspirate it, and a " ' (apostrophe)" to turn it to an ejective.

Grammar
Qḱptt͜kt͜kp͜kk is polysynthetic with heavily inflected nouns.

Nouns
The nouns are inflected for case and gender.

Core Cases
A transitive verb has two arguments, the Agent (which is doing the action) and Object (which is affected by the action), while an intransitive verb has one Sole argument.

The cake (Sole) burned (Intransitive).

The person (Agent) burned (Transitive) the cake (Object).

Qḱptt͜kt͜kp͜kk nouns take different cases depending on the tense of the verb.

Cases Which Are Prepositions
These are prepositions in the standard language, but cases in certain dialects. They modify the subjective form of the noun.

Non-Locative Cases
A ditransitive verb takes three arguments: the subject, direct object, and indirect object.

The person (Subject) gave (ditransitive) the cake (Direct Object) to the store (Indirect Object).

For every tense in Qḱptt͜kt͜kp͜kk, the subject takes the pegative case, the direct object takes the case used for the argument of an intransitive verb for that tense, and the indirect object takes the dative case.

Locative Cases
There are a large number of regularly-structured locative cases in Qḱptt͜kt͜kp͜kk, many of which carry meaning similar to specific prepositions in English. The case names according to Wikipedia's list of cases are on the chart where corresponding case names exist.

Notes: 1. These cases can only refer to nominalized verbs.

Semi-Locative Cases
These cases seem related to locative cases, but

Genders
This language has at least seven genders.