Alegna

General information
Aleña (/al.'e.ɲa/) is a Romance inspired language spoken in modern-day Portuagal, Spain, and Southern France. It is regulated by the Academy of Aleñal Culture and Language. (AACL).

Diphthongs
[aɪ, aʊ, je, wo]

Orthography
1c is pronounced as [s] before [j, i, e]. A hard c can be written as qu

2g is pronounced as [x] before [j, i, e]. A hard g can be written as gu

3r is pronounced as [ ɾ] at the beginning of words and after consonants. It is pronounced as [ ʁ] everywhere else.

Aleña uses the acute accent (´) to mark stress. Except in a dipthong, a grave accent (`) on a vowel indicates a vowel is preceded by /j/.

Punctuation and Capitalization
Periods

Aleña uses periods to end a complete sentence or abbreviate a word, e.g. ''Lê àivòne vuolào suovêr lo dào. ''

Commas

Aleña uses commas to depedent clauses or preposition phrases to the beginning of a sentence or to separate ideas in a list.

Question Marks

Question marks appear at the end of an interrogative sentence

Quotation marks

Aleña uses < > instead of quotation marks.

Capitalization

Aleña capitalizes names, titles, and place. It does not capitalize religions, languages, or adjectives derived places

Stress
Stress in Alenã falls on the penultimate syllable, except in infinitves, where it maintained Latin's stress on the V̄́re. Irregular stress is marked by the accute accent (´).

Nouns
Unlike the other romance languages, Aleña did not completely eliminate Latin's case system, however, it came quite close. Latin's 5 declensions were also condensed into 3 declensions, with neuter nouns becoming masculine. Furthermore,  Latin's cases were reduced to the nominative and oblique in Aleña. They are used as follows:

The nominative case is used to mark the subject of the verb and after certain prepositions. It is also used to mark the agent in the passive voice.

The oblique case is used to mark objects of the verb and after certain prepositions. It is also used to mark the patient in the passive voice.

Other cases are expressed using prepositions, most notably the genitive case. To express posession, the preposition dê is used along with the nominative case. The possesor is the head of the prepositional phrase (e.g. dê lê àivòne - of the airplane of the airplane's).

Ambiguous case/gender/number are resolved by the articles (which are provided in the dictionary entry. Gender should be memorized).

Declension I
These nouns are derived from the -a stems in Latin and are mostly feminine.

Declension II
These nouns are derived from the -us, -um stems in Latin and are mostly masculine.

Declension III
These nouns are derived from the  -es, -is stems (in the genitive) in Latin and are both masculine and feminine

Pronouns
Pronouns in Latin preserve the case system to a much higher degree than regular nouns, keeping (to some degree) the nominative, accusative, dative, genitive, and reflexive cases. In general the nominative case is used to mark the subject and after certain prepositions, the accusative case is used to mark the direct object and after certain prepositions, the dative case is used to mark the direct object, the genitive case is used to mark possesson, and the reflexive case is used to indicate that subject both does and receives an action. However, note that some verbs change meaning when used with a reflexive pronoun. Also, the dative is used in certain passive constructions (deponent verbs). Aleña uses separate possesive pronouns that agree in number, gender and case with the noun they possess. Note that the third person singular and plural posssesive pronouns are identical.

1st person singular 2nd person singular 3rd person singular 1st person plural 2nd person plural 3rd person plural

Aleña's interrogative pronouns and adjectives, while descended from Latin's, have lost case, number, and gender. They are listed in the table below. The relative pronouns/adcjectives in Aleña are listed belove. Note they are similar to the interrogative pronouns/adjectives, differing only by an accent. Finally are the Aleña demonstrative pronouns/adjectives. These are used simillarly to their English counterparts. They agree in number in gender with their antecedent/the noun they are describing. Note which forms are the same.

Adjectives
Adjectives in Aleña are far simplier than there Latin counterparts and only agree in number and gender with the noun they are describing.

Adjectives that end in -ào Adjectives that end in a consonant.

Articles
Aleña uses articles to express definiteness and agree in number, gender with the noun they modify. Since some nouns have ambigious gender, the definite article is provided as part of the dictionary entry. The definite article is used more frequently than in English (like in Spanish), but the indefinite article is used in approximately the same way.