Gubzgazl

Gubzgazl (previously known as Qolpqolpzkasl or Qolpzkasl) is a language that originally was a subset of Ancient Pencil Language that broke off into a new language when the speakers of The Pencil Language fled to The White Realm to avoid being destroyed by an extremely powerful, artificially-engineered god known as The Seer.

Gubzgazl has many strange traits, such as extreme reliance on verb agreement and having a consonant inventory composed of no voiceless sounds. Another important thing of note is that an extremely large amount of vocabulary is borrowed directly from The Pencil Language and adjusted to fit Gubzgazl's phonetic inventory and phonotactics.

Classification and Dialects
Gubzgazl does not have distinct dialects. The language is relatively synthetic, although it inflects much less than The Pencil Language.

Phonotactics
Gubzgazl, overall, is much less restrictive over dipthongs than The Pencil Language and allows

Nouns
Nouns only decline to case. There are no articles nor grammatical number (although it technically can be conveyed via other adjectives).

Pronouns are completely absent, although technically they exist in the form of prefixes. This will be demonstrated via the verb "lav" (speak). 1st person goes completely unmarked, so a verb can mean both that verb and "I [verb]".

This is handled the same way if there are adjectives. This will be demonstrated via the adjective "i'azh" (bad/evil). However, if there is an object in the phrase, such as in "I see you", things get much more complicated. The object of a phrase/sentence cannot be by itself, and thus needs to attach onto either a verb/adjective. Usually, the preferred verb is "vin" (be/exist), as it is the most basic verb. This does create a little ambiguity ("gan bvin" either means "I see you" or roughly "I see your existence").

The noun cases are:

-ub = locative case

-ib = genitive case

Possessors come after the thing their possessing, unless the possessor is a pronoun, in which the pronoun plus the genitive case will be prefixed to the thing that is being possessed. This same rule also applies to the locative case.

Verbs
Verbs conjugate according to aspect, mood, and tense.

The verb inflectors are:

i'u(b)- = relativizer/gerund former

bugvig- = perfective aspect

abug- = imperfective aspect

la- = imperative mood

-uzh = subjunctive mood

-azh = dative case

-uv' = roughly translates to "to" (can be used on words like "bzhiv" (die) to switch the verb from reflexive to non-reflexive, as in bzhivuv' (kill), which literally means "to do death to")

To specify that the action is able to be performed by the doer (as in "I can see"), the particle "nan" is added after the verb.

The future tense is created by combining the imperfective aspect with -uv'. For example, "li'" means "like", and "abugli'uv'" = "will like".

Syntax
The sentence structure is SVO. Adjectives come after the head.