Uklantirian

Introduction
Breaking the fourth wall here, but please keep in mind I am doing this as a hobby. I am not a linguist, although one day I hope to be. But my "language" is really just something I can do when I feel like it, so it's not as detailed, and with much less thought put in. For example, the sentence structure for the most part mirrors English. But hey, it's a sentence structure that works and that I know well.

Alphabet
The Uklantirian alphabet is much like the English, except j and v are not included. Uklantirian relies on pairing up of letters to differentiate sounds that letters make. Everything is spelled phonetically in Uklantirian.
 * A is pronounced like the a in awful, and AA is pronounced like the a in apple
 * B is pronounced like the b in battle
 * C is pronounced like the ch in change, and CC is pronounced like the German ch, as in Ich
 * D is pronounced like the d in danger, and DD is pronounced like the th in them, a lower, less breath-y th.
 * E is pronounced like the e in enemy, and EE is pronounced like the a in able
 * F is pronounced like the f in Fahrenheit, and FF is pronouned like the v in vulture
 * G is pronounced like the g in German, and GG is pronounced like the g in garden
 * H is pronounced like the h in hello
 * I is pronounced like the i in intimidate, and II is pronounced like the the e in evil
 * K is pronounced like the c in carp
 * L is pronounced like the l in land, and LL is pronounced like a snake hiss, like a German ch without the the throaty rumbling, like in Welsh
 * M is pronounced like the m in man
 * N is pronounced like the n in name, and NN is pronounced like the ng in going
 * O is pronounced like the oa in oats, and OO is pronounced like an Ö
 * P is pronounced like the p in purple
 * Q is pronounced like the qu in quack, and QQ is pronounced like the cky in trac'k you
 * R is pronounced like the r in red, and RR is a rolling r
 * S is pronounced like the s in sense, and SS is pronounced like the sh in shake
 * T is pronounced like the t in tantrum, and TT is pronounced like the th in theology
 * U is pronounced like the u in understand, UU is pronounced like the oo in food, and UY is pronounced like the oy in oyster. UY is the only diphthong made up of two different letters.
 * W is pronounced like the w in wave, where it acts as a consonant, but WW is pronounced like the ow in owl, where it is a vowel.
 * X is pronounced like the cks in cracks, and XX is pronounced like the s in Asia.
 * Y is pronounced like the y in yak, where it acts as a consonant, but YY is pronounced like the i in identity, where it acts as a vowel
 * Z is pronounced like the z in Zachary, and ZZ is pronounced like the ts in flats

Pronouns

 * O is the first person singular pronoun (I)
 * Ryy is the second person singular pronoun (You)
 * Huy, Suy, and Tww are the third person singular pronouns (He, She, and It respectively)
 * Om is the first person plural pronoun (We)
 * Ruy is the second person plural pronoun (You all)
 * Ssuy is the third person plural pronoun (They)
 * Xxuu is a pronoun representing "one". As in, "in order to fix this machine, one must use a wrench"

Verbs
For the most part, the verbs are pretty uniform, the only irregular verbs are the modals.
 * First person singular verbs end in -ww
 * Second person singular verbs end in -uy
 * Third singular in -yy
 * First plural in -wwt
 * Second plural in -uyt
 * Third plural in -yyt
 * Xxuu verbs in -imo
 * Infinitives end in -oto
 * Present participles end in -occ
 * Commands are simply the stem without endings
 * To make it past tense, add -est- in between the stem and the ending
 * To make it future tense, add -err- in between the stem and the ending
 * To negate it, add -qann- in between the stem and the ending. If it is negated and future or past, add it after the stem and before the tense modifier. Ex. O Eccqannestww, I did not eat