Kalégian

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Thank you for your cooperation.

Vowels
Only when a vowel is stressed will it become a long vowel.

Phonotactics
The only rule for the phonotactics of Kalégian is that every consonant must have a vowel following it; there are no exceptions. So, CV is the only real rule, since there are no consonant clusters. The English name of Kólada (Kalégian) cannot be counted in this

Writing System
Because the writing system for this language cannot be typed on a human computer (or simply, there is no unicode hex input for any letter in this language), I will transcribe it using the latin alphabet. The original writing system shall be posted soon.

When over vowels, the acute accent (´) denotes stress on the syllable that that vowel is in. For instance, the name of the language, Kólada, is pronounced ['kʰoː.lă.dă], with stress on the vowel [o] in the first syllable. However, when the vowel ɨ shows up in a word, the syllable it is in shall be stressed.

Nouns
Nouns only decline to number, so they can be singular (1), paucal (2-12), or plural (≥13).

Pronouns
All pronoun prefixes end in -e.

Verbs
There is no form of the verb to be. Instead, the subject of the sentence is almost implied to have its own form of the copula just built in. So, if I were to say, in Kalégian, be [beː], then I would be implying that "I am." If another noun followed the word be, such as kómana, the word for man (as in a human being), and formed a sentence be kómana, that would literally mean, "I am a human."

Conjugation
Because this language was constructed by someone of the kóliga turaléfe race, it is completely regular. So, to conjugate a verb according to person, add the specific pronoun prefix (of the pronoun prefixes shown above) whether or not there is already a noun posing as the subject.

Syntax
The word order is Subject-Verb-Object (SVO).

Lexicon
/Swadesh/