Talger

Stress
Stress goes on the second to last syllable unless otherwise specified with an acute accent on a vowel. Acute accents on consonants only change their sound.

Conjugation
Conjugate According To:
 * Tense:  Past, Present, Future, Conditional
 * Mood:  Indicative, Imperitive, Subjunctive

Conjugation Table
Drop -err and add endings below (Stress then goes the the penultimate syllable, unless otherwise specified):

Aspects
The aspects in Talger are as follows:
 * Simple
 * Progressive     [Zerr]  +  [Present Participle]
 * Perfect            [Kerr]  +  [Past Participle]

Negation
'Ne' is used to negate nearly any part of speech. Negations preceed aspect particles.

Object Pronouns
Object pronouns are placed after the conjugated verb. This only applies to pronouns. Indirect objects can only be expressed in prepositional phrases.

Interrogatives
Interrogatory sentences, i.e. "When did you go shopping yesterday?" begin with an inquiry word and end with a question mark. The subject is placed before the verb as usual.

True/False questions, i.e. "Did you go shopping yesterday?" are formed by placing the subject after the verb and adding a question mark '?'

Confirmation questions, i.e. "You went shopping yesterday?" are formed as declarative statements are, with a subject at the beginning of the sentence. These types are preceeded by inverted question mark '¿' and followed by a standard question mark '?'

Articles
The only article is Li, the definite article.

Other Adjectives
Non-posessive adjectives can have the following degree affixes attached.
 * Mesa-:       Very
 * Na-:           Un/Non

Adverbs
Adverbs in Talger end in -o. Always. Do not pass go, do not collect $200.

Formation
Unless completely impossible, adverbs are formed by dropping -ai and adding -o to their respective adjective. Adverbs are placed before the verb, unless it's weird to do so.

Other adverbs are simply used to modify adjectives or other adverbs. These end in -oi but are formed the same way

Prepositions
Very simple. They end in -ejj. They work exactly how you might expect.

Numbers
When numbers function as nouns, they end in -e. When adjectives, they end in -a.

Nouns
Nouns end in -e and are pluralized by adding -n.