Baremi

Writing System
The letter J (igoxja) is used exclusively at the end of words as a replacement of the acute accent. For example, the word maj (shoe) ends in igoxja because it ends with the same phoneme as the letter á (a i-mexj). However, if a suffix is appended to a word ending in igoxja, the acute accent is restored. The plural of maj is mák, which appends the -(i)k plural suffix and discards the igoxja for a i-mexj.

Nouns
Baremi nouns are not gendered but they do decline to two numbers (singular and plural), and thirteen cases. The thirteen cases are:
 * nominative - the subject of the sentence
 * accusative - the direct object of the sentence
 * dative - the indirect object of the sentence
 * locative - one of three prepositional cases, correlating to in, on, and at
 * instrumental and instructive - by what means or objects an action is performed
 * genitive - indicating possession
 * causal - indicating a reason (e.g. because of the delay)
 * essive - indicating a specific time (used when referring to past and future events)
 * semblative - indicating similarity
 * sociative and abessive - respectively correlating to with and without
 * vocative - to address others

Declensions
Five declensions exist for all Luluo nouns, with the first and second declensions being the most common and the last (fifth) being the least. Singular and plural endings are indicated on either sides of a slash. Only the fifth declension does not possess a plural form.

As Baremi does not have gendered nouns, all nouns decline in a similar manner. Slight differences are made for nouns that end in vowels or igoxja and plural nouns. The table below demonstrates the declension of gatu (cat), gatuk (cats), xasjim (shirt), xasjimik (shirts), and máj (shoe).

Personal Pronouns
Pronouns decline to number and case. The first- and second-person pronouns do not decline for gender. In the table below, absolutive and ergative forms are shown. The third-person pronouns are declined for gender. There is no neuter third-person pronoun, so the pronoun of any inanimate, non-human noun depends on its grammatical gender, i.e. a feminine noun would be referred to by cha in the absolutive case. Thus cho and cha can mean "he" and "she" respectively, as well as "it," depending on context.

Reflexive pronouns
Reflexive pronouns are used alongside reflexive verbs to express that the subject and object of a transitive verb are the same. A distinction is made between introverted reflexives (verbs that are inherently reflexive, e.g. "to wash (oneself), to perjure") and extroverted reflexives (verbs that are not usually reflexive but are used as such, e.g. "to kill oneself, to love oneself"). The pronoun ka (4th or 5th declension, depending on gender) is used for the introverted, whereas kale (2nd declension) is used for the extroverted as well as to put emphasis on an inherent reflexive.

Placed right after the subject in the same case, the pronoun kale is also used as an intensive pronoun.