Langi

Nouns
In Langi, there are five cases. They are Abjective, Dative, Genative, Prepositional and Essive. There are also three numbers, Singular, Dual and Plural.

Abjective
The Abjective case is the most important. Its nouns end in the suffix -i. Abjective case nouns are used as the subjects and objects of a sentence. For example, in "The cat sees a dog" "cat" is the subject and "dog" is the object.

Dative
Dative case nouns end in the suffix -ir. Dative case nouns are used as the indirect objects of a sentence. For example, in "Mary reads the kindergarteners a story" "kindergarteners" is the indirect object.

Genative
Genative case nouns end in the suffix -u. Genative case nouns are possessives. For example, in "my friend's book" "my" and "friend's" are possessives.

Prepositional
Prepositional case nouns end in the suffix -as. Prepositional case nouns are the objects of prepositions. For example, in "through the woods" "woods" is the object of "through."

Essive
Essive case nouns end in the suffix -ä. Essive case nouns in English mean like/as something. For example, in "He dressed like a girl." "girl" is in the essive case.

Numbers
Dual is two related items, to form it, add -a. Plural is two unrelated or three or more of anything. To form it, add -o.

Verbs
In Langi, verbs are conjugated by tense and aspect. The four tenses are Past, Present, Future and Future-in-Past. The last one in for things that used to be in the future. The two aspects are perfect and imperfect. Perfect is "he HAS done something" imperfect is not.

Adjectives
Adjectives end in -at, -oros, or -os

-at: most adjectives

-oros: some adjectives

-os: participles and ordinal #s

Numbers
...
 * ini
 * di
 * 1) sani
 * ki
 * fi
 * 1) eksi
 * 2) sebani
 * 3) okti
 * 4) noni
 * 5) deki
 * 6) deku ini
 * 7) deku di
 * 8) deku sani

Ordinal #s end in -os

Adverbs
Adverbs end in -er

Prepositions
End in -θ

Particles
bak- passive voice

(more to come)