Meula

Vowels
Vowels can be long or short. Long vowels are spelled with an acute.

Phonotactics
Only /l/, the affricates, approximants and the fricatives can be in coda position. Only /l/ can only be followed by an affricate or a fricative.

Intervocalically, /l/ is pronounced /ɾ/. This consonant can only start a non-stressed syllable if it is the last of the word.

The voiced fricatives have mutaded when in coda (before a voiced consonant) or between vowels (in the old language): They have become voiceless in initial position, which is why no word starts with /β̞/ or /ɰ/.

Nouns
Nouns do not decline for number, but some words are used in the plural exclusively. There are 4 cases: Nominative, Accusative, Dative, and Prepositional, and a predicative form.

Declensions:

A hyphen means the consonant takes it affricate form, assuming it has one.

Paratheses mean the vowel is taken away.

1.: Most words. Ending on consonant and having two or more syllables.

2. Ending on consonant and having one syllable, usually made with o or u.

3. Ending on a vowel that is not a and having two or more syllables.

4. Ending on a and having two or more syllables.

5. Ending on a vowel and having one syllable.

Adjectives
Adjectives agree to their nouns and go after them. The chart above applies to them.

Verbs
Verbs have polypersonal agreement. There are no intransitive verbs, motion verbs need no preposition. Verbs agree to person, number and mood. The tense is made with an auxiliar verb.

Syntax
There is no fixed word order, although usually the structure is VSO.