Wyncer

Vowels
Much like English, Wyncer is a consonant-oriented language, meaning that vowels can essentially be completely butchered while still retaining meaning. There are 6 main vowels:  a, e, i, o, u, and y. As long as each vowel is recognizable, the exact realization is relatively free.

Writing System
Note:  After a W or at the end of a word, the letter Y is pronounced as /i/.

Stress is denoted with an accute accent. Words ending in closed syllables have a default stress on the final syllable and don't require accents unless the stress is elsewhere. Multisyllabic words ending in open syllables always have an accent.

Verbs
Vincerian verbs always begin with vowels and and with a closed syllable. Tense, aspect, mood, and voice are indicated through the use of an auxiliary verb. Person (1 or 3) and number are indicated through pronouns. Regular verbs only conjugate to the simple present and preterite. Auxiliary verbs conjugate to a variety of things (depending on the verb) which can include tense, aspect, mood, number, person, and more obscure information such as volition

The example verb Éricin is conjugated below

Auxiliary Verbs:
 * Active
 * Passive
 * False Subjunctive [FSub] - Special form of the subjunctive indicating that something is not actually the case.  For instance, Bob told Mary that she [fsub] could park at the office (when there isn't actually parking at the office).  It can also be used to indicate an attempt at something.  For instance, Bob tried to force Mary to park in a different spot (and failed) could be stated as Bob forced Mary to [fsub] park in a different spot.

The standard active auxiliary verb is conjugated below

Sandbox

 * Use "out" for applicative betterness (outdo, outperform, outrun) as well as more creative stuff like "outkilled" and maybe "5 mins out, 5 mins back"
 * maybe have a universal negation that can also do stuff like "disoutran" for "ran slower than" versus having to use a passive "was outrun by"
 * Have polar and absolute negation ("dislike" versus "does not like")
 * Grammatical gender based on "good" and "bad" nouns (maybe incorporate polar negation)
 * Gentive vs. oblique declension...nothing else
 * Noun endings -x -e -i -a
 * Maybe -i for genitive -ex / -ax for singular good/bad and -e / -a for plural good/bad...or mabye do the whole "opposite ending" thing like -ex / -a and -ax / -e and neutral nouns can end in -ox or -ux or -ix