Ćín

General Information
Proto-Sitʲan (/sitʲan) is the mother language for the sitʲan language family, spoken by the la sitʲa race, who were wiped out during the First Elder War, approximately 12,000 ybm (years before Molivian), this language is believed to have been spoken by them around 15,500 ybm. Because of the age of the language, this reconstruction is still not universally accepted.

Proto-Sitʲan is an agglutinative language that uses extensive vowel-ablaut and very few suffixes/prefixes. It is notable for it's extensive range of palatized consonants. Note, IPA will be used until I come up with an ortho. Also, because number is indicated on the article, not the noun, I will usually type an indefinite article with the noun.

Consonants
Allophones are in The palatalized consonants were short lived. It is believed that in many early daughter languages around 14,900 ybm, the palatalized consonants had become diphthongs. However most linguists agree that they did exist, even if only for a short time. Given that there is no ablaut chain that starts on /jV/, it is believed those diphthongs come from palatalized consonants.

Vowels

 * only found in the ɔ and u ablaut chains.

Accepted diphthongs include /eɪ/, /aɪ/, /ɔɪ/ outside of the ablaut chains, and /ja/, /jɛ/, /je/, /wɔ/, and /wo/ within the ablaut chains.

Phonotactics
Syllables in Proto-Sitʲan are simple, they are given by (CC)V(CC). Stress is usually on the penultimate vowel, unless otherwise indicated by an accent mark. the stress is always on the second vowel in a diphthong.

Writing System
Proto-Sitʲan was a spoken language, not a written one. Therefore this is no agreed orthopgraphy