Adwan

Adwan (Ad: Áðẃana) is a partially naturalistic con-lang invented for the sake of gaining a wider understanding of general linguistics. The language itself developed a life of its own, and with each passing day, it grows with more vocabulary, more additions, and more characteristics that make it stand out from other inflecting languages.

Name
The name "áðẃana" comes from the root mind, "áðe", to speak "ẃan". It is an archaic compound word, not used anymore due to an evolved vocabulary, which means "a spoken mind."

Phonology
To view complete phonological tables of consonants, diphthongs and vowels, click here.

Adwan has a moderately unique phonology, as it has extensive use of using the consonant /j/ coupled with both vowels AND consonants, without actually having a letter for /j/. It is said that Adwan tends to sound like a mixture of Icelandic, Norwegian, Czech, Polish, and, even Welsh due to the use of the Alveolar Lateral Fricative.

Alphabet and Orthography (Åneþurav nę Şemyçav Áðẃanaz)
Adwan is a fairly phonetic language; everything is sounded out as it is written. "Pevle" will always be pronounced /pevle/, and "Ar" will always be pronounced /ar/. There is only one sound change that isn't marked directly by the orthography, and that is the nasalization of ‘m’. Generally, for a lot of consonants, ’m’ will become nasalized; so if ‘m’ isn't a dominant, stressed consonant, it will be /ɱ/; A good English example is the word "symphony". You don't say /sɪmfəni:/, you say /sɪɱfəni:/. M is nasalized when preceding all consonants except for C, Ç, S, Ş, T, and Þ. It is NEVER nasalized when preceding vowels.

Syntax and Morphology
As in many Indo-European languages, Adwan is highly inflected; Adwan inflects nouns for number, grammatical case, and, seldomly, gender. Verbs conjugated for tense, mood, and aspect. A distinctive feature in Adwan is the lack of auxilliary verbs, as they are all conjugated into the verb.

Gender
Adwan is not a gendered language at all. Most nouns are neuter nouns, and end in -y, -a, or -u. The reason nouns aren't gendered is that if an item's gender is unknown, it is neuter, rather than being automatically masculine. However, gendered nouns aren't that uncommon, as a dog in general is dogúl, a dog that was specified previously as being a boy (ie. my poor dog jack!) would have a masculine ending, therefore, it would be dogél; the same rule applies for femenine gendered nouns. A feminine dog would be dogól. Another great example of the flexibility of gender in Adwan is the usage of the noun "sibling" and "parent". There are no actual words for "brother" or "father", merely "male-sibling" and "male-parent", etc. Ex: Parent is Fevny; therefore Mother would be Fevno, and Father would be Fevne.

Case
Adwan inflects its Nouns, Adjectives, Pronouns, and Numbers. Nouns are inflected for number, grammatical case, and occasionally, gender; Adjectives are inflected for grammatical case, and adjective type (Descriptive or Predicate); Pronouns are infelcted for case, person, and number, and numbers are inflected for case.

In Adwan, there are 7 cases; the Nominative, which marks the subject; the Accusative, which marks the direct object; the Ablative, which marks the causative object; the Genitive case, which marks relationship and posession; the Dative case, which marks the indirect object; the Locative case, which marks the location, and the Vocative case, which marks the noun being addressed.

A good way to find out the case of a noun is to ask yourself these questions:

Nominative/Strůň: ''who? what?''

Accusative/Eçůň: I have what/who?

Ablative/Kůsůň: because of who/what?

Genitive/Xentyň: of who/what?

Dative/Ostreň: to whom/what?

Locative/Úråň: at/around what?

Vocative/Äraň: I call whom?

Noun Declensions
Nouns are separated into two groups; nouns ending in a/á, y/ý, or u/ú are genderless/neuter, and take up the neuter conjugation when used as nominatives with verbs. Nouns ending with e/é are masculine and should take up the masculine third person conjugation when used as the nominative, and o/ó are feminine nouns, to be used with the feminine third person conjugation when it is the nominative used with a verb.
 * NOTE, all declined nouns MUST end in a consonant. If they don't, you're declining them wrong.

Vóška -- House; Marty -- Fox; Dogú -- Dog; Fevne -- Father; Prvlo -- Sister.

Adjective Declensions
Adjectives are seperated into two groups with three subsets per group. The first group, the descriptives, are adjectives that describe the noun. In English, these are the adjectives that precede nouns. The second group, the predicates, are adjectives that describe how a noun is doing. Most of the time, predicates follow a ‘to be’ verb. In English, they, for the majority of the time, follow the verb ‘to be’. DESCRIPTIVE SUBGROUPS
 * The yellow dog is big. Yellow is to be declined in the descriptive, as it describes the noun, while big is to be declined in the predicate, for it describes how a noun is doing.

Descriptive adjectives are divided into each of these subcategories: PREDICATE SUBGROUPS Groň -- Big; Kafás -- Brown; Þnoš -- Boring; Grot -- Big; Oř -- Happy; Glyzeraž -- Not dirty, not clean.
 * Descriptive adjectives that end in -ň are related to size, shape, and overall moderately permanent adjectives.
 * Descriptive adjectives that end in -ás are related to color, and temperature, and overall adjectives subjected to change within time.
 * Descriptive adjectives that end in -š are related to feelings, emotions, and overall things that are definitely temporary.
 * Predicates ending in -t are related to size, shape, and overall moderately permanent adjectives.
 * Predicates ending in -ř are related to color, temperature, and overall adjectives subjected to change within time.
 * Predicates ending in -ž are related to feelings, emotions, and overall things that are definitely temporary.