Sinpa

Synapsis
Simpa was an Auxlang-Englang Cross language with inspiration of $$K\bar{e}len $$"Verbs" and Toki Pona. Now im reforming it to be a natural englang

Consonants
sh and zh only occur if the onset isn't intervocalicly, if it is x and j are used.

Example: ojo /o̞ʒo̞/, zhoan /ʒo̞än/, shanjoan /ʃänʒo̞än/, zhixoju /ʒiʃo̞ʒu/, bijoshzhuxo /biʒo̞ʃʒuʃo/

Vowels
Any vowels can be articulated with other vowels (all dipthongs + 5 long vowels/diphongs)

Gramar Words
Gramar Words (are Particles), NEVER ARE closed, so many posible sylables aren't Gramar words

Names
Names are Proper names and borrowings for other languages, similar to Toki Pona, to use a Noun you need to "languatize" it, following the table (UV is unvoiced) (VD is voiced) (NL is non-lateral) (LT is lateral) all letters are asumed to be in the onset, the hyphen marks the distintion beetwen the onset an the coda, if an with-hyphen sound apears in a coda the "coda" apears in an onset of a new consonant Example: valla (in rare dialects) [βäʎä]: valaya,[βäʎi]: valiya, [βäʎ]: valya (schwa): nasal schwa is transcribe as /a/, the roticied Schwa is transcribed as /e/, elsewhere transcribed as /o/

roticied are transcribed with a coda l, and nasals use a coda n, unless the onset is a Labial consonant, in this case, the coda is m

if any separation is needed an a can be inserted

So "España" is esapana, and "england" is ingalongada

Gramar
The word without any marker is treated as a noun

(V-n/m V) Noun to verb sufix. ikouk->ikouknu. zhude->zhudeno. opmap->opmapma

(V-f/v V) Noun to descriptor sufix. ikouk->ikoukfu. zhude->zhudevo. opmap->opmapfa