Marmonnement

Marmonnement (French for murmur) is a constructed language created by Andrew Sanders as an overcomplicated first-grade science fair project for the Moricounien Federation (complete information over here).

Details
Marmonnement is heavily based on Chinese and Korean in terms of orthography.

It has SVO word order and it does not decline. It instead uses suffixes to indicate tense, gender, mood and declension in other cases such as ownership or association (like in Latin) in a similar fashion to Austronesian languages (and to a certain extent, Japanese), making it easier to learn since all they basically have to do is to string words together to create cohesive sentences with minimal modification to these words.

It is a syllabic language, and its orthography is completely phonemic with absolutely no morphophonemic characteristics which Korean and Chinese has. However, its difference from Chinese is that there is a 1:1 correspondence with the syllables and there are no more than one meaning per character or syllable, reducing confusion amongst speakers in terms of relying on context. Its orthography is based on Chinese with almost flexible syllable construction, given that the speaker knows that there is no "initial" vowel and syllables are grouped similarly as in Tagalog, Chinese or Japanese. The syllables are either written alone, or as radicals in "phono"-semantic compounds, albeit being pronounced exactly the same way. The intonation guideline recommends slowing down when the suffixes are mentioned to denote their distinction, as they are also commonly written as individual letters compared to the syllables.

New words are formed by stringing words together as how they would've sounded like in English. For example, red table would've been viji, and not jivi. "Nine saltshakers" would be gu gwgyakawen, literally meaning nine solid saltiness containers. Solid saltiness is what is called simply as salt in English. The wen suffix denotes plurality, and it literally means be, with an -n suffix to denote multiple they, i.e., "there are multiple of them".

It sounds like a mix of Japanese (with all the koe syllables), Korean (orthographical inspiration) and Chinese (with some unorthodox syllables). Compared to Korean, less voiced consonants could be heard, and are primarily dominated with K and W, seemingly in contrast.

Syllables
The Marmonnement's sounds are based on Korean, with vowels A, AE, E, I, O, EO (transliterated OE), EU (transliterated W) and U, and iotated ya, yae, ye, yo, yeo (transliterated yoe), yeu (transliterated either yw or yuu) and yu and w-based diphthongs wa, wae, we and oe (transliterated wi). Its consonants are then based on all possible consonants in the entire history of the language, including obsolete ones (K, G, N, D, R, L, M, B, S, NG, J, CH, T, P, H, ʔ, Z, TH, V, and F).

While some syllables correspond to a CJKV equivalent (i.e., re meaning man from ren, ki meaning tree from ki in Japanese (mu in Chinese) and dae meaning big from dae in Korean (da in Chinese)), most others were arbitrary additions to the language by Andrew. For instance, moe means mourabiteau, since it starts on mu (based on Japanese pronunciation), and pi means pee, because it sounds like it (compare with niao in Chinese and nyou in Japanese).

There are four kinds of syllables: base syllables, isolated vowels, consonant finals and suffix pseudosyllables. Base syllables are syllables which have an initial consonant and a vowel. Isolated vowels are vowels on their own, meant to form diphthongs whenever they collide with other vowels, or to form pseudosyllables, or syllables that don't mean anything but are a result from the construction of thought using purely suffixes. Consonant finals are consonants on their own. Both isolated vowels and consonant finals are suffixes. This makes the language nearly purely agglutinative.

All of these base syllables are pictograms, also similar to the origin of Chinese radicals and in turn Japanese hiragana and/or katakana.

The most common transliteration model uses Hangul. Simply exploding them into individual letters ("Marmonnement small script") is not an official transliteration model.

Script
Marmonnement has three scripts: gwonyabw (Marmonnement small script; lit. Marmonnement hangul writing), jozanyabw (Marmonnement ideographic script; lit. Chinese-mannered Marmonnement writing) and jiwennyabw (Marmonnement large script; lit. syllabic Marmonnement writing). The Marmonnement small script is an alphabet, also known as exploded Marmonnement script, similar to how hangul has been experimented to be treated like Latin because of how it was conceptualised. It is used for suffixes for distinction with syllables and foreign names. The Marmonnement large script is a syllabary and it is composed of the heavily-simplified pictograms which represent a single idea. The Marmonnement ideographic script composes words into ideographic blocks similar to Chinese characters and is mostly used for literary and heavily abbreviated uses.

Marmonnement regardless has no specific stroke order.

Marmonnement ideographs are read by decomposing the ideographs into the perceived syllables, then arranging them according to English adjectival order.

Marmonnement also has a Latin script, however this variation made it so that the letters are much closer to Marmonnement letters. This is primarily used for foreign names.

Examples

 * Hello, I am Andrew Sanders = Lepae-noemae, wek Andwru Sandws. (Happy start to you, I am Andrew Sanders.)
 * Moricounien Federation = Daehachuwenw Kiwenwchukoe-koe (Big one many-places of many-tree place [refers to the Japanese original morikuni which means forest state])

Isabelle's speech
Hwik gawikoe 2016 (gawingae busa) wengkoe gwpaehwiko'a gwgorewenwkoe wengkoe moekoe tatochukoe wekkoe wengkoe gawikoe zonoegawingae bugw'wengnoe Swmasi. Wibunaelenga, winaebulenga. Gawipoe, hwigwka - webuko'i daefegyo tavebilejoep he dagwgofegyo rewenkoe; weko'i daefegyo tavebilejoep. Wenkoe gwgoko'i wen. He hwik leweng - bigapaeta.

''I remember the time in 2016 when I tried to establish communism when the mayor of the town I was assigned to at the time was on a sabbatical to this Smash fight. It did not go well, it went horribly. Now I understand that, I should not be both a distributrix persica and securitas majora to the people; just be a distributrix persica. Their safety should be of their own accord. Additionally, I think it's fair to say that we have succeeded''