User:03oV7kEvl/Xofsopil

Xofsopil ['ʃofsopil] is a language featuring unambiguous european-alike grammar, and lexicon borrowed from English.

Writing System
Letters read as in IPA except: c /θ/, q /ð/, x /ʃ/, j /ʒ/, y /j/, ng /ŋ/, h /x/, gh /ʀ/.

Phonotactics
The stress is on the first vowel. There is no reduction.

Grammar
A text consists of sentences obligatorily split with sentence conjunctions. A sentence conjunction ends with -ux, e.g. andux - and, butux - but, thatux - that.

The intransitive verb in this language is expressed as an adjective or as a noun. That's why there could be the following parts of speech at the top of the sentence: noun, verb, diverb, triverb.

A verb, a diverb, and a triverb obligatorily have subject. They differ in the ending sets and in the last vowel of the base.

A verb in this language is a verb with exactly one object. The base ending is -u + endings are -r, -ris. E.g. hugur - to hug (who, whom), searchur - to search (who, what), buildur - to build (who, what).

A diverb is a verb with two objects. The base ending is -e + endings are -r, -ris, -rus. E.g. giver - to give (who, to whom, what), thanker - to thank (who, whom, for what), jealouser - to be jealous (who, of whom, to whom).

A triverb is a verb with three objects. The base ending is -a + endings are -r, -ris, -rus, -res. E.g. exchangear - to exchange (who, with whom, what, for what), translatear - to translate (who, what, from what, to what), punishar - to punish (who, whom, with what, for what).

-r means the straight order of the subject and objects.

-ris means the inversion of the subject and the first object.

-rus means the inversion of the subject and the second object.

-res means the inversion of the subject and the third object.