Ladérà

Ladérà (pronounced [la de'ʁɑ̃]) is a complex language with relatively unique in most aspects. However, Ladérà draws influences from French for pronunciation, and Amharic for syllable structure. Ladérà is a highly inflecting and adaptive language; there are few elements of a sentence that are not changed according to the situation.

Phonology
Letters in Ladérà have exactly one sound each, and there are no redundancies.

Phonotactics
Every syllable in Ladérà is compromised of a consonant followed by a vowel. The only exception to this rule is the letter "Ŋ", which can only be placed at the end of a word, without any letter following it.

The accented syllable is always the final syllable. Accented letters mark a change in sound produced, not a change in the placement of the accented syllable.

Genders
Ladérà has four genders. These are, as follows:

Cases
The cases in Ladérà are as follows:

Tenses
Tenses are as follows:

Ladérà has many "markers" that would otherwise denote a case, but for the sake of simplicity are simply described the section on circumpositions.

Persons
Ladérà has four persons. These are:

Verbs
Verbs in Ladérà agree to the gender, number, and person of its subject. Verbs also agree to tenses and moods (there is no other element of Ladérà that explicitly agrees with mood). Each conjugated verb is in the following setup:

The conjugation element of a verb includes all forms of the word, including the infinitive. Note that the three sub-elements of conjugation are not clearly defined from one another.

Note that if a verb is progressive, it must be in the progressive or conditional-progressive tense (whichever is applicable). If it is unknown when a verb took place other than if it was the past, present, or future, then the simple tense is to be used. There is no real rule to when the near future or past is to be used.