Myncky

Setting
Myncky is designed to be a world interlanguage, easy to learn by people from all backgrounds. Myncky is designed to be easy, predictable, and has mostly a priori vocabulary, but borrows some from many different languages.

Consonants
Consonants are written identically to the IPA symbols except that /ç/ is written  and /x/ is written /h/.

Vowels are written like in IPA except for /ɨ/, which is written .
Therefore, the 23-letter alphabet for Myncky is ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPSTUVWYZ / abcdefghijklmnopstuvwyz.

Phonotactics
There are no dipthongs; all vowels are pure. A maximal syllable is CCVCC. The first two consonants must be a stop-glide, a fricative-stop, a fricative-nasal, or a fricative-glide sequence. The last two consonants must be a nasal-fricative, a fricative-stop, or a stop-fricative sequence. Words do not end in voiced stops or fricatives, although syllables may do so. In no case can a word end in a glide.

Stress is marked with an apostrophe in cases when the stress is not on the first syllable. The apostrophe comes directly after the vowel letter.

Basic Grammar
Simple sentences have similar SVO structure as in English.

Nouns
Nouns only decline for number. For a noun that ends in a vowel,  is added to the end, unless the vowel is , in which case  is added. For a noun that ends in a consonant, the plural suffix is , unless the word ends in , in which case  is added. An apostrophe is then added to the end of the word to indicate that the word is not in original form.

To use nouns with prepositions, the preposition comes before the noun, and are joined by a hyphen. Now the two words act as one unit and must be moved around in a sentence together. Example showing possession: This is somewhat similar to the case systems of other languages: in the example above, "ci-Kevyn" could be considered the genitive case of "Kevyn", using a prepositional prefix. However, it is also okay to consider the two as independent, only needing to remember that they move around together. Nouns without prepositions must stay in its assigned place in a sentence as the subject or the object.