Globien (格罗比言·全球语)

Klovien (三叶语) is a constructed language serving as an International Auxiliary Language (IAL). The name comes from English word "clover", because this language is a fusion of the three most popular natural languages: English, French and Chinese.

It differentiates itself from others by its special construction method of words: 99% of Klovien vocabulary includes an element from Chinese, and that number is 80% for English and 70% for French respectively. This makes its words are very easy to learn and to memorize, and not easy to be forgotten, for the 3.5 billion people with background of either English or French or Chinese, almost half the population of the whole world.

The overall progress: Phonology~90%, Grammar~80%, Lexicon~30%.

Classification and Dialects
Klovien is a fusion of English, French and Chinese. It has even less variation of words than English, but it does use suffix to distinguish noun, verb and adjiective, and also reserves one variation of noun (number) and one variation of verb (past tense).

The other morphology rules are more like that in Chinese, including most of the verb tenses, voices, and aspects. Therefor we classify Klovien as Fusional-Analytic.

The phonemes are designed clearly separated, thus Klovien could be read in different accents either as in English, or French, or Chinese, or others.

Consonants
There are 20 consonants in Klovien. They are: All sounds like those in English, with three exceptions:
 * b, p, v, f;
 * d, t, l, n;
 * g, k, h, m;
 * z, c, s, r;
 * j, ch, sh, gh
 * 1) Letter c always sounds [ts], which is similar to that in Chinese.
 * 2) Letter g alone always sounds [g], while [ʤ] uses j and [ʒ] uses gh.
 * 3) Letter r sounds more like that in Chinese or alveolar trill, or that in English after a vowel (eg. sir).

Phonotactics
One letter/letter combination only has one sound; one sound only has one letter/letter combination.

Writing System
Klovien uses the ordinary Latin letters. Only 22 letters are substantially used in its vocabulary, but the other 4 letters (q, w, x, y) are also reserved for special loanwords, such as people's names.

The names of the consonant letters are all read as their sounds in words, plus an [e] in the front or end, except H and Q which are a little bit different. The names of the vowel letters are all read as their sounds in words. With this standard design, the letter table is much easier to read and memorize.