Ayeyarok'þ

General information
Urdcax is a language i have created for songs and poetry, it also is a playground for exotic lingustic features, I have no qualms with people who may want to learn the language or people who want to create languages which could be related.

I have also devised and english based creole for the language called unglish (urdcax english)

Here is a sentence in english:  I herd female yaks in the mountains and to the pastures, my king

Unglish: aherr yakfemal mountains-in pasture-to, kïn o mine

urdcax  vwäⱬřw'müüüǧyarǧüǩhȩ̀ǩhelorrëȷm̨utl'üq̓brkxl'lw'vwðbr

unglish's alingment is similar to urdcax rather than english for example in unglish, man me  (unglish and urdcax lack the verb to be and they are both head intial and predomintaly right branching with adjectives). Means I am a man however to say something like I run is arun

Tones
The Urdcax writing system is a mixture of logographic and featural, It uses logographic for the lexical morphemes whilst grammitcal morphemes are written in the featural alphabet. I do not have a standard romanization for urdcax mainly because of the large amount of sounds not found in many languages.

Phonotactics
The phonotatic rules are fairly laxed alonging for words such as kx'lhw' (king)

Alphabet

Grammar
The aligment of urdcax is fluid s this works by having the intranstive marked with either ergative or absloutive depending on how much control the subject has. This is an example  ǩaǩaǩaǩvwüǩ which means I am a decidious tree, the intranstive subject vw (first person singular pronoun) is marked with the absolutive this is because the subject has no choice on wither they are a tree or not. the opposite to this sentence ⱬaⱬvwäⱬ which means I worship, the subect vw (1s) is marked wth the ergative because the subject has the choice to worship.

the verb structure for a standard transtive subect of agentive objective verb order. e

Ergative tense direction absolutive verb instrumently aspect negative/oblique locative illative/ablative/allative oblique honour

vwäⱬřw'müüüǧyarǧüǩhȩ̀ǩhelorrëȷm̨utl'üq̓brkxl'lw'vwðbr

vw äⱬ řw' 'mü l ü üǧ yar ǧüǩ hȩ̀ ǩhelorr ëȷ m̨utl' üq̓ kxl'lw' vw ð br

[βʷʌʐəʟ̝ʁ

1s erg  across female yak plural abs herd staff inst habitual mountains present loc pasture allative   superior my king

I herd female yaks in the mountan and to the pastue my king.

the abslotive noun and or the locative  is the marked with tense as a opposed to the verb which is marked with the aspect. Considering everything is incorpated in the language it could be theortically said that the tense and aspect are both marked on the verb.

Here is an example for the word ḧouu (skirmish

Example text
English

vwäⱬm̨nliluukoȑoeȷñnč̓orreȷ wymkltlfäşñnfweč̓üǩç'ǀL vwäⱬñnhʕrrlüǧb'6f'wʔk' b'3ʔk'vwðäⱬñņşk'aaʡllvok'rritşǩor

vwäⱬéüǧt'fr8ieḧouuhèèeč̓

In wet grass upon a hill sweat and blood cling to me I look through the horizon I see the enemy advancement I remeber you in the last skirmish