Galavic

Introduction
This is my rough notes for a proto-Fayn language. This shows some early efforts at what would eventually develop into the Galav Language family. I may remove this page and replace it with the updated Proto-Galav language or else I may keep it around as a note and to see where some of the ideas and innovations behind the Galav [and perhaps eventually all of the Sphaeran languages] came from.

The rest of this article is unchanged;

History
A proto-language which might develop into a fuller conlang and then language family. For now, it's by best attempt to give the Fén language a plausible backstory and development. Galavic is now a largely dead language in the setting, supplanted by regional dialects that arose as they spread further over the continent. Fén is one of the four resulting languages.

The Galavic language never developed its own writing system.

Vowels
Galavic does not distinguish vowel lengths.

Phonotactics
Smallest Syllables Possible, Diphthongs are avoided even in the construction of compound words.

Consonants can consist of C-V-V, C-V, V-V or V.

Masc/Fem Distinction
Long/Short vowels in Fén are used inGalavic to mark a consonant sound as masculine/feminine respectively. A consonant is always surrounded by vowels of the same type, though these vowels may be subordinated into a schwa and barely pronounced, particularly in cases of odd or difficult diphthongs.

a noun ending is always "i" if feminine, "a" if masculine.

Pluralization consists of adding a lentitioned "b" sound [v or w].

A verb ending will usually be "e" if feminine or "o" if masculine.

Pluralization [occuring due to the multiple occurances, not multiple subjects] consists of adding a lentitioned "b" sound [v or w].

Historical Shifts from Galavic to Fén
Long-Short Vowel distinctions were made, Long vowels assimilated the weaker sounds in diphthongs.

f because distinct as a softened sound.

Genders were dropped.

t-c, n-ɲ, d-g, ʀ-r, ʎ-l, χ-h became distinct as genders were dropped. Fén is in the process of separating s-k.

c, ɲ, ʀ, ʎ and χ were assimilated into t/k, n, r, l  and h respectively.

Object Preposition developed.

Noun/Verb distinct endings were dropped and the words were shortened.