Ahise

General information
Ahise is your average synthetic conlang (which was designed to sound and look like Amerind, i.e. Quechua, Nahuatl). :3

Why coming up with a name is so difficult?

Phonology
I'm lazy to format the tables with.

Consonants
/h/ occurs as allophone of /χ/ and /x/ between back vowels. Labialized consonants are indicated by "w".

Vowels
Long vowels are indicated with a macron.

There are 12 diphthongs, every vowel with /ɪ/ (i.e. /eɪ/, /oɪ/, etc); indicated with i after the vowel (ei, oi), /aʊ/ (au), /oʊ/ (ou), /eʊ/ (eu).

Phonotactics
Consonant clusters include maximum 2 consonants of different places of articulation, ie two plosives can be in a row, but one requires to be e.g. velar and the second e.g. alveolar.

Altering of sounds
Nasals:

Nasals become voiceless before voiceless consonants in complimentary distribution, qabamtei "we could do this a long time ago" is mainly pronounced /'qa.ba.m̥te/

Plosives:

All plosives agree in voicing with their successor consonants. More to be done >_>

Stress
The stress always falls on the penultimate syllable.

Nouns
(More to be done)

The vowel declension is basically the same as consonant declension, with some minor differences.

Words ending in u and o just replace the final u/o with w and take the consonant declension and words ending with i replace the final i with y (and take the consonant declension).

The ablative case can also be used as a form of (lacking) abstract-essive (?), as in ihowe-kis itemiheke "in their dignity and rights"

Both declensions take -le ending when counting, i.e. ö čēkle, qu čēkle, etc.

Verbs
Explained with the stem qaba-.

Personal endings
If two same consonants occur in a row it's simply replaced by a single consonant, like *qabatte - qabate. If voiceless consonant and then its unvoiced counterpart (and vice versa) occur it's replaced by a long unvoiced consonant, like *qabadte - qabatte.

Other constructions
Hortative: Passive mood is indicated by -ti at the end of the verb phrase.

Pronoun subjects:

Syntax
Ahise is ergative-absolutive, which means the subject is in ergative and the object is in absolutive, for example "A dog bit a man" is translated as Hukasi sakašit čēk.

It can use a form of passive voice, which involves the object in ergative and the agent in absolutive, e.g. "A man was bit by a dog" is translated as Čekaz sakašiti huka. (Overall, this all makes quite a mess :/)

Article 1

 * Ze čēkme toch hoyike ihowekis emiheke taheste. Atzitem qaweke tarēhiste dadarökis ühekis tehaweme.

/ze 'tʃek'mɛ to.ho'i.kɛ i.ho'wɛ.kis ɛ.mi'hɛ.kɛ ta.hɛs.tɛ. a.tsɪ'tɛ(m) qa.wɛ.ke ta.ɾɛ:'his.tɛ da.da'ɾø.kis y'(h)e.kis tɛ.ha'wɛ.me/

all human.being-COUNT free equal-ENCL dignity-ABL right-ENCL be.born.PART-COP.IND.GNOM.3pl. sense-INSTR conscience-ENCL give.PASS.PART-COP-3pl brotherhood-GEN spirit-ABL act-IMP.PRES-GNOM.3pl