Old Shax

General Information
Derived from French. It containes heavy phonological changes. It has been influenced phonologically by Spanish and Greek. Its lexicon influenced by, in order, French, Greek (much influence from Greek because of the large amount of immigrants), Latin, and Yorshaan (the conlang).

Vowels
¹ Can be unstressed to (/u/ = /ʊ/, /i/ = /ɪ/²)

² can be unstressed to /ɪ/ but  must be /i/

Stress
Polysyllabic Goes on the second to last syllable, except when it is a diphthong and/or multigraph then it goes on the last.

Monosyllabic Goes on the last syllable.

Alphabet
C will be /s/ before I, Y, and E; G will be /ʒ/ before I, Y, and E

Passive
Pronoun + êtuar + present participle (ex: Ìo te amo = I love you; To su amati pa ìo = You are loved by me)

Indicative
Preterite (past perfect): pronoun + indcative present abuar + past participle

Relative Past: pronoun + indicative past abuar + past participle

Relative Future: pronoun + indicative future abuar + future participle

Condtional
2nd Conditional: pronoun + indicative past abuar +

3rd Conditional:

-Ar
ex: palar (to Speak, Say, Tell)

Subjunctive
Always used with 1) a hypothetical, 2) an expressed opinion, or 3) a possibility that may or may not happen

Conditional
grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/conditional2.htm

-Eir
ex: exeir (to Get out, Leave, Part from, Exit, Pardon yourself from)

Subjunctive
Always used with 1) a hypothetical, 2) an expressed opinion, or 3) a possibility that may or may not happen

Conditional
grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/conditional2.htm

Declinations
Plural Nouns: -s

Subject Pronouns
They act both as subject and the direct object

Gerund
Note: Gerunds are considard noun, therefore must have articles as well (unless a genitive nouns takes over)

Article
Always immediatly before the noun.

Adjectives
Always after the nouns.