Bengedian

Consonants
Bengedian possesses the following consonant phonemes:

Vowels
Bengedian's vowels are:

Declension of nouns and adjectives
Bengedian nouns, pronouns, and adjectives decline for case and number. There is no grammatical gender. Adjectives agree in case and number with their head nouns and take the same endings.

There are six "declensions" in Bengedian. Which class a noun or adjective falls into is determined by form alone, depending on the word's final sound in the nominative singular: a consonant, /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, or /u/. The noun and adjective declension is given below, one for each class:

Notice how:
 * The nominative and accusative are mostly identical, but nouns and adjectives ending in a consonant take a final -e in the accusative singular.
 * The dative singular -e on words in -i.

Verbs
Verbs are conjugated for three tenses (past, present, future) with four distinct endings in each tense: one for each person in the singular, and one in the plural. The plural verb takes the same ending for all persons; person is not distinguished on the verb in the plural. :-)

In addition, a verb consists of two non-finite forms (infinitive, past participle).

The different classes of verb are given below:

Notice:
 * The past tense seems to have a certain element that reminds one of, oh say, Germanic weak verbs for instance. I'll confess to borrowing here :-D
 * The participle ending is normally -ec. For verbs with a stem in -c already (the infinitive -em doesn't count as part of the stem), use -eth instead--they mean the same thing.
 * For the past tense of verbs whose stems end in -p or -c, the ed of the past tense becomes a t instead.