Antocu

The Amorese Language (native Antocu) is a constructed language that is to be used by people of Amoro in the Chungganation in the near future.

Side note: Most of the changes happening to this language can be viewed in this page: bit.ly/nisujantocu

General Info
Honestly, this is the thirteenth idea of a conlang I had. With the other twelve, practically all are either not really conlangs, or are just hybrids of different languages. Some even have little progress, but scrapped them. This idea will not only incorporate the other ideas I had in mind before, but will truly represent the region of love (Amoro, Chungganation) in the conworld I'm making. I haven't introduced other conlangs though.

Let me introduce the Chungganese language first. It is technically not a conlang because I developed the said language from Spanish. I would like to introduce this because Antocu will have some features of Chunganese. Amorese is an agglutinative language, therefore it has a lot of affixes added at the end of the word to denote a word/phrase. It also uses a modified Hangul writing system; modified due to the alphabet of Amorese, but can also have the Latin script (the one commonly used), depending on the liking of the user. Amorese is mostly an OVS language (or object-verb-subject), and this is flexible.

Phonology
There are sixteen letters in the Amorese alphabet; a, b, c, ch, e, i, j (pronounced as h), l, m, n, o, p, r, s, t, u. It also has other vowels such as ya, ye, yo and yu. Amorese is almost a phonetic language (one pronunciation per morpheme), because of the usage of j and u.

Changes in J Example: bejume is pronounced beume
 * When J is preceded by an accented vowel, j starts a new syllable. Otherwise, the syllable continues.

Changes in U NOTE: yu is an exception. If u is the last vowel in a word, it will never be silent. Example: unúpa is pronounced unupa
 * When U is preceded by an accented vowel, u starts a new syllable. Otherwise, drop the u sound.

Verbs
Amorese verbs are simply conjugated depending on the doer of the action.

The subject is added after the verb stem (without the -ri affix). Progressive and/or perfect tenses (-ne and -ja) are added before the subject. No past tense and future tense affixes are used, so Amorese speakers rely on time markers. Example:

As one can see, me is the pronoun I, while ne is the progressive conjugation.

Adverbs
Adverbs of manner usually have the suffix -na.

Example:

love -> gati

lovely -> gatina

Dictionary
Under construction. Check this link from time to time to see its progress: Repsalantocu