Alitalia

General information
Lingua Alitalia (English: Alitalian Language), or Alitalia for short, is the official language in Federa Respublika Alitalia(Federation of Alitalian Republics), which is an intergalactic federation. It is said the ancestores of Alitalian people were emigrated from the Earth to a habitable planet several thousand years ago, stimulated by an unknown "divine" power, and then evolved into a human-like race and over 3,000 hybrid races. They united together and explored the universe, and found the Earth around 1st Century A. D. The language itself then transformed, absorbing a lot of Latin words, but only kept simpler inflections. Modern Alitalia does have conjugations and declensions, but highly regular (and relatively simple, of course).

Alphabet
Alitalia use Litera Baronika (literally "Letter of Baron", where Baron doesn't mean "baron" in English) as its common alphabet, but every letter has its equivalent letter in Latin script. Therefore, this article, with any article relevant to Alitalia, uses Latin alphabet instead of Baronic alphabet.

Alitalia uses 24 letters, with upper and lower cases. They are listed by order as follows:

Aa Bb Gg Dd Ee Kk Ff Hh

Ii Ll Mm Nn Oo Pp Rr Ss

Cc Tt Ww Uu Vv Yy Zz Xx

The alphabet, when used independently, must be listed in three lines with 8 pairs of letters each line.

Nouns
There are proper nouns and common nouns in Alitalia as in other languages.

Proper nouns are capitalised; when indicating names, locations and unique localised objects, the spelling will be as close as the localised pronounciation. For example, Moskva (not Moskow or Moskov), Misr (not Egypt), Nihon (not Japan). But Kataiy (not China or Zhongguo).

There is a simple declension for nouns, as they have nominative and genitive. Nouns in genitive form can also act as an adjective, but unlike adjectives, they must be placed after the head.

Conjugation
Infinitives are always end with letter "i", with only a handful of exceptions. There is a conjugation rule for verbs, including a "disposal form", which oddly comes from Chinese. As described above, the conjugation table is universal for all regular verbs (ended with "i").

A verb generally has 12 forms, with non-past (present and future) and past tenses, active and passive voices, neutral, progressive and perfect aspects. It doesn't use perfect-progressive aspect.