Attuvish

General Information
Attuvish (Atteuvje'ng [ʔaːtːɤvdzeˀŋ]) is the most spoken Attuf language, spoken by the semi-nomadic Attuf people across the Horn of Hacounm on the planet Patrona.

Consonants
m, 'm, n, 'n, ng, 'ng, nm, 'nm, p, b, t, d, k, g, ', kp, gb, f, v, s, z, kh, gh, h, c, j, ch, 'h, l, y, w, r
 * The trill /r/ only appears in a handful of non-borrowed words, usually onomatopoeia.
 * Most consonants can be geminated between vowels.

Vowels
i, u, ou, e, eu, o, a

Diphthongs (all are falling): ue /ɯe/, ueu /ɯɤ/, ouo /uo/, ey /ei/, eeu /eɤ/, euy /ɤi/, eue /ɤe/, ay /ai/, aeu /aɤ/

Phonotactics
CV(C)
 * Geminate consonants are phonemically two consecutive identical consonants, and as such, they cannot border another consonant.

Stress
Any one of the first three syllables may be stressed, and the stressed vowel is lengthened. Stress is not usually marked, but it will be here, but not if it's on the first syllable. Stress stays on the same vowel in any inflectional form.

Example
takp- "to poison" atikakpa, atumakpa

Tense/Aspect infixes
The tense/aspect infixes are placed after the first consonant of a root. They can only be used with the nonfuture tense.

Perfect (-0-), Present continuous (-ik-), Past (-um-)

ex. ceula "It has said", cikéula "It is saying", cuméula "It said"

Voice infixes
Passive -fou- is placed before the final consonant of the root. ex. Ceufoulaya. "They few will be told."

Non-finite circumfixes
0-0 infinitive

Syntax
SVO

Numerals
Decimal system:
 * 1) ninety has a couple of translations: gawsip being the most common/informal, gawághudouleu being the most proper, or rarely pezipsippou.A peculiarity of Attuf languages is the fact that most have simple words for several unsimple numbers. The additional simplex numerals in Attuvish are for 25 (compound for 75), 18 (compounds for 36 and 54), 45, 200 (compound for 400), and a few others which have completely fallen out of use.