Ulzan

Phonology
Consonants

1. /h/ can be palatalized, while /x/ can be labialized.

2. ⟨'ъ⟩ between two vowels is spoken as /ʔ/, while ⟨ъ⟩ between two consonants makes the consonant it follows unreleased.

Phonotactics
1. All syllables must have a nucleus and a consonant, where the consonant is either the onset or the coda.

2. The onset may have at most 3 consonants.

3. Multi-consonantal onsets must contain a fricative or an approximant.

4. Only nasal and plosive consonants may be followed by palatal glides.

5. /ŋ/ and /ɻ/ may not be part of a multi-consonantal onset.

6. Affricate onsets must be mono-consonantal.

7. A nucleus can have at most two vowels.

8. Codas may have at most 3 consonants.

9. Clusters of consonants must have the same voicing.

10. Two vowels of different syllables must be separate.

Hence, the structure of the syllable: C₁[C₂][C₃]V₁[V₂][C₄][C₅][C₆] or [C₁][C₂][C₃]V₁[V₂]C₄[C₅][C₆].

Pronouns
Pronouns decline to number and case, but not gender.

Declensions
Nouns decline to three genders: feminine, neuter, and masculine.

Feminine nouns end in a single vowel, neuter nouns end in a vowel cluster, and masculine nouns end in consonants.


 * if the ending is a stop consonant, - с, -з, or -х,  the suffix is - я; else,  -на

Verbs
Verbs conjugate to tense, aspect, and voice.

Copulas
Улзаньйг has three copulas: -[н/ъ]дэъ (to be), -[н/ъ]демъ (to become), and -[ьй]долаъ (to be located at).

Structure and Conjugation
General verb structure: Root, Aspect, Tense, Misc.

The infinitive form of verb can be divided into two sections: the root and the ending. The ending is usually -ъ.

There are three ways to conjugate a verb. The conjugation of a verb will depend on the type of ending the root has.

First Conjugation: The root ends in a single vowel.

Second Conjugation: The root ends in a vowel cluster.

Third Conjugation: The root ends in a consonant.

Modal Endings
Detonic modality allows the speaker to express a desire of what should be according to the speaker's perspective.

The imperative forms commands that the speaker wants to be followed. Ex. to kill --> Kill!

The obligatory form describes what must be done in a situation. Ex. to stand --> You must stand.

The suggestive expresses what the speaker wants another person to do. Ex. to sleep --> You should sleep.

The permissive form expresses what the speaker permits another person to do. Ex. to leave --> You may leave.

Adjectives
Adjectives come in stative forms and attributive forms.

Attributive forms of adjectives decline identically to the noun declensions and must match the case of the noun they modify.

Stative forms of adjectives conjugate identically to the third conjugation of verbs. If the adjective does not end in a consonant, add - т before conjugating.

Comparison
Like all other adjectival forms, comparative forms follow the same rules of declension as nouns.

Given the structure X (comparative) Y, the comparative must match the case of X, X and Y must have matching cases, and Y is the standard for comparison.

There are two types of comparison: the comparative and superlative. The comparative form is used to compare two objects (The apple is bigger than the pear), while the superlative is used to describe a part compared to a whole (This apple is the biggest fruit in the bowl).