Vrakki

Test language, with the purpose of testing specific and uncommon speech form.

Nouns
Each noun begins with a fix structure as follows:

Consonant(s) + vowel + eventual mark of the genitive, the active, the ablative or the inessive + rest of the word.

The mark of the genitive is -e, that of the active is -i, that of the ablative is -a, and that of the inessive is -u.

Ablative and inessive are to consider opposite of eachother: ablative expresses the provenance or the fact of being outside (of something), while inessive expresses the fact of being inside of something.

The plural is obtained by adding -i at the very end of the word.

Demonstrative pronoun
The demonstrative pronoun is "a" before his noun. Example: a tannk = the thought.

Personal pronouns
The usual form of a personal pronoun is a characteristic letter + a. However, when adjoined to a noun ending with a consonant, it gets automatically inverted to permit pronunciation. The -a can be omitted in the case of a noun already ending with -a.

Possessive pronouns
Possessive pronouns are the same as personal pronouns, but suffixed to inactive nouns. As example, tainnkak = I think, tannkak = my thought.

Verbs
Verbs do not exist.

Explanation
Nouns and optionally particles (prefixes etc.) are used to express actions instead of verbs. Nouns that are used as normal nouns are considered in the inactive form. Futhermore, an active form of the same noun can exist and reflects the action of which the noun is an object. Example: As you can see, an active noun comes down to the same as a verb, so "verbs do not exist." was more a joke because verbs exist in the way that they are used as active nouns. However, even if "tainnkak" is translated as "I think" in English, it originally means "thought-me".

Samples
= "In a time of my death, the existence of men is a dream."
 * "Taurd a dreepak, a vaka naegi dram"