Faulona

Faulona was created to familiarize myself with Latin and Italian, and yes, it is another Romance conlang, but it contains genders and a bit more of a grammar than my previous conlangs. It's vocabulary is largely from Vulgar Latin, with a bit from Classical Latin, and it underwent many of the same sound changes as Italian, except for the "l>i" shift seen in words like "piacere". from Latin "placere".

Setting
I don't really have a conworld, as I'm not as much into that, but if I were to designate a place to this language, it would definitely be somewhere along the northern coast of the Mediterranean, due to its similarity to Latin and Italian.

Consonants
These aren't written in IPA, as the chart mostly shows how they're pronounced. These mostly are written as they appear in the language, except for the alveolar-palatal affricates and fricatives, which are pronounced every time an "i" follows a t, d, or s.

Vowels
Alphabet:

A B C D E F G I K L M N O P R S T U V (Z)

A Be Ce De E Ef Ge I Ka El Em En O Pe Er Es Te U Ve (Ze)

Phonotactics
In the alphabet, the "z" is shown in brackets because there is not actually a letter for it.“Z” is written with one “s” in the middle of a word (whereas “s” is written with two), and it simply isn't put at the beginning of a word. It also doesn't come up in consonant clusters unless the other consonant is a voiced plosive.

Casa=house=/ˈka.zʌ/

Cassa=he breaks/ˈka.sʌ/

Most words cannot end in any kind of consonant, but words that end in nasals are allowed, and the nasals assimilate to the next letter's point of articulation.

"Un" and "On" are never written with "m" at the end, but still assimilate.

Other words ending in nasals are usually prepositions, and end with a voiced bilabial nasal (written "m") before a vowel (as long as the next consonant is not also a voiced bilabial nasal), as well as before bilabial letters. Before alveolar consonants, a voiced alveolar nasal (written "n") is used, and before velar consonants, a voiced velar nasal (written "n") is used. Before labiodental fricatives, a voiced labiodental nasal (written "n") is used.

Cum=with Sem=like, as (semblative/essive, cognate with "same")

Cun on basio=with a kiss ("n" is actually a voiced bilabial nasal) Cum on sodalo=with a comrade Cum pane=with bread

Basic Grammar
Largely SVO, or SOV in which the object is a pronoun, including the reflexive "se" pronoun.