Tazidovu

Tazidovu, originally named Liwi, is an ogliosynthetic interlang designed to have one word per morpheme.

Orthography
Most are written one to one, but there are a few variations to make it easier to type in plaintype.

Phonotactics
Tazidovu uses a simple CV(n) syllable structure. The (n) can only be the sound /n/.

Words
In Tazidovu, each word has four possible separate meanings. Let's examine a word such as (gu) for example. (Gu) has four possible meanings. The first is the noun. A word is a noun by default and doesn't modify. The second is the verb. A verb requires a -n suffix in order to become a verb. The third is the adjective/adverb. This is placed after the word it modifies. The fourth and final is the special. Special is usually reserved for colors, and for colors is preceded by the word for color, (hi).

Syntax
In a sentence, the actor must precede the verb, and the acted must supersede the verb. The actor is not necessarily a subject and the acted is not necessary an object. The actor will always be what interacts with the acted, and the acted will always be the affected thing by the actor.

Let's take a basic sentence, such as "I am going to the store." To begin, we translate each word to their respective Tazidovu form: (Ya) - I, (She-n) - to Move, (chu-Ge-ke) - to the Store 'towards-Place-money'. In theory, you can change up the way your words work in order to not confuse certain ideas. You can be as descriptive or as nondescript as you prefer.

Then, the words are arranged. The hierarchy is shown below:

The final form for this sentence is Ya shen chu geke.

There is no need to have just one "other" clause.

Take the sentence "You ate the fish at the pond because you were hungry."

(Ye) - You | (nyu-san) - past-toConsume | (ga-gu) - Animal-water | (chu) - place | (gu) - water | (ja) - reason | (ye) - you | (nyu-wun) - past-toBe | (de) - hungry

You can imagine the sentence being broken into the elements of a main sentence, and each subsequent extra sentence following, mandated in form by its prefix.

In nouns, the adjectives supersede the word it modifies, while verbs have the adverbs precede it. This is due to the -n suffix, and having adverbs supersede the verb would make pronunciation more difficult.

Word Creation
Tazidovu is an example of a compound word: (Ta-zi-do) - Person-sound-information + (Vu) - Small. In many cases, the words presented in Tazidovu won't be enough to discuss every single word. But the process of word creation allows the description of more complex sentences.

There is no single word to describe one thing. Let's take a word for cell phone as an example.

The most basic form of cell phone could be Baja - Hello + far. But you could substitute this for one slightly more complex: Tazidoja - Person-sound-information + far. Further, you could describe it as a Lovutazidoja - Machine-small + person-sound-information + far. As you can see, more complex measures are constituted as separate elements ultimately describing the first element.