Logglo

Introduction
Logglo (from lógiko glossi ‘logical language’) is a Neo-Latin constructed language developed from 2016 to 2021 by Xavi Abadia (alias Xabadiar), who studied psychology at the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya.

Logglo is influenced mainly by Peano’s Interlingua (1903) and Michaux's Interlingua (AKA Romanal (1912)), and Hogden’s Interglossa (1943), as well as Rosenberger’s Idiom Neutral (1902), Jespersen’s Novial (1928), Brown's Loglan (1960), and Romániço (1991).

After having tried several morphological arrangements (this conlang has mutated many times), this is the present picture:

Vocabulary
The vocabulary is basically taken from Latin, not only Classical Latin, but also Vulgar Latin, Late Latin, Medieval Latin, Modern Latin, and Contemporary or ‘Wikipedia Latin’. While Interglossa’s lexicon was approximately half Greek and half Latin, the amount of Greek lexicon in Logglo is lower. To name a few examples: glossi ‘language’, bibli ‘book’, dáktili ‘finger’, psiki ‘mind’, zoi ‘animal’, kardi ‘heart’, dermi ‘skin’, hépati ‘liver’.

Stress
Most words are stressed on the vowel (or diphthong) just before the last consonant: ama ‘love’, fini ‘end’, lento ‘slow’. árbori ‘tree’, fácilo ‘easy’, cámeri ‘room’, kórpori ‘body’, fémini ‘woman’, hómini ‘person’, líbero ‘free’, nómini ‘name’, númeri ‘number’, ókuli ‘eye’, témpori ‘time’, etc.
 * When there is no last consonant, the stress is simply on the first vowel: di ‘day’ (24 hours), rei ‘thing’.
 * Since many Latin words are proparoxytone (arboris, facilis, camera, corporis, femina, hominis, liberus, nominis, numerus, oculus, temporis, etc.), we may indicate the irregular stress with a written accent:
 * Only the last element of compound words keeps the stress: lekti-cámeri /lekti'tʃameri/ ‘bedroom’, fini-yo /fini'jo/ ‘final’, di-yo /di'jo/ ‘daily’.


 * Unstressed grammatical particles end in u: ilu (definite article), du ‘of’, etc.