Pilonja

Pilonja is also in my conworld along with Terugs. Pilonja is a non-morphological language, that features heavily on vowel harmony. Pilonja is not complete either, so don't expect much out of it.

=Grammar=

Vowel Harmony
The first thing you must know about pilonja grammar is the vowel harmony. The vowel harmony is regular, and its use is also regular. Learning where vowel harmony is used is a must in pilonja. on the chart below, if a vowel must harmonize with another vowel, they must be on the same row. You do this by changing the vowel that is harmonizing to the one that is on the same row as the other vowel, but is in the same column as its self.

Additionally, "i" harmonizes with everything and does not change. "ä" and "e" are special. Each can only be used with certain preceding consonents, and when they need to harmonize, they change to the vowel that they are harmonzing with. When another vowel is harmonzing with it, it changes according to the preceding consonent. "d" is the exception consonent, it does not change its following vowel when it is either "ä" or "e."

Examples. In this chart, the second vowel on the left is harmonzing with the first. The right side is what the result would be. None of these are words, but just examples

Nouns
Nouns in pilonja are simple. They have no gender, no number, and are not marked to be a noun as opposed to other types of words. Nouns break down into 3 cases, and a special case which functions as a verb, which is explained in verbs. The three cases are regular, locative, and the apptly named other.

Regular
Nouns in the regular case are used as the nomitive and accusative in other languages. They are the doers and the do-ees. They do not morph and are the dictionary form of the noun.

Locative
Nouns in the locative case use prepositions, like "to" or "from." The morphology for a locative noun is that it harmonizes its first vowel with its preposition.

=Dictionary=

=Example text=