Lingueakh

Setting
Lingueakh is a personal language and an experiment, without an associated conculture, save myself, perhaps. It's vocabulary is a combination of both made-up words and words borrowed from Indo-European languages.

Vowels
Phonotactics

Gender
Lingueakh has no grammatical gender other than gender variants for human words. There are three genders for such words: masculine, feminine, and neuter. For words describing people which change according to gender, words ending in -i are masculine, in -a are feminine, and in -o are neuter. The third person pronouns can be inflected for gender except for the genitive and reflexive forms. Any other noun is neuter by default, although -i or -a can be attached to it for clarification of gender if necessary. Whenever using gender-inflected nouns to refer to a group of mixed gender, the neuter gender is always used. Likewise, the neuter gender is used when the gender is unknown.

Examples: omei (man), omea (woman), omeo (human/person)

Personal Pronouns
Personal Pronouns in Lingueakh are declined like all other nouns. They are the only nouns in Lingueakh with irregular declension patterns.

Verbs
Lingueakh verbs are conjugated according to voice, mood, tense, aspect, person, and plurality. There are four moods: indicative, subjunctive, imperative, and conditional. For each verb, there are six infinitives: three active infinitives (perfect, present, and future), and three passive infinitives (perfect, present, and future). From each verb can also be derived an adverb, adjective, agent noun, patient noun, as well as other possible deverbal nouns.

Adverbs
Adverbs in Lingueakh are placed after the verb they modify.

Adjectives
Lingueakh adjectives are always placed after the noun they modify. They do not change according to plurality nor case. Adjectives have four forms, described below.

Note that the positive and negative comparatives can be used interchangeably, depending on which noun they modify. If you were comparing a book and a movie in conversation, and you thought the book was better, you could say either of two things:

"Librum ëstit bonra." (The book is better.)

Or "Filma ëstit bonna." (The movie is not as good.)

Standard
Standard adjectives consist of a stem and a monosyllabic ending, or a monosyllabic stem only. The final syllable is dropped in the other forms of the adjective.

Example: bon (good), lente (slow)

Positive Comparative
Positive comparative adjectives are used when comparing nouns to say that one object has more of that quality than the other. They are formed by attaching -ra to the stem.

Example: bonra (better), lentra (slower)

Negative Comparative
Negative comparative adjectives are used when comparing nouns to say that one object has less of than quality than the other. They are formed by attaching -na to the stem.

Example: bonna (not as good), lentna (not as slow)

Superlative
Superlative adjectives are used to say that the noun has the most of that quality out of all. They are formed by attaching -ŏr to the stem.

Example: bonŏr (best), lentŏr (slowest)