Bawe

Classification and Dialects
Bawe [ba we] is a language in the Auso-Maal Language family spoken by the people of the nation of Ŋelá. Bawe has diverged dramatically as the people who would become the founders of Ŋelá Emigrated from Auso Lo roughly three thousand years ago and settled far away on the continent of Kaal.

Writing System
Those who write Bawe in world do so with the Abugida associated with the language, but at the time being romanization proves more practical until the creator finishes the font For said abugida. In the Abugida there is a placeholder consonant that the creator is choosing to ignore in the romanization as it does not add much.

Nouns
Nouns in Bawe do not decline, nor do they have grammatical gender or number. As can be expected there are words with numerical and gender connotations, they behave no differently than any other nouns. Nouns also do not show definiteness.

Verbs
Verb infinitives can can be identified by their terminal "- ŋ" which will be dropped in conjugation before adding a postfix that will always ind in "-m".

To form an imperative use the ending "-mem" for affirmative and "-maem" for negative. Structures.