Ssandongnese

Classification and Dialects
Ssandongnese, or Ssandong'ŭh, is a language that evolved in the nation of Ssandang(guo) an indipendent nation on the Shandong peninsula in china.

Soundchanges from Mandarin
f > x !_[u,o,a]          fei > xei l > n /_[y,u,o]          lo > no ts > tɕ                   tsa > tɕa tsʰ > tɕʰ                tsʰɤ > tɕʰɤ ɻ > ʂ                    ɻɨ > ʂi ʈʂʰ > ʈʂ                 ʈʂʰɨ > ʈʂi [ɯ,ɨ] > i                ɕɨ > ɕi f > p͈                    faŋ > p͈aŋ high and rising tone are merged, the dipping tone is changed to a low tone, the falling tone ends in a glottal stop.

Phonotactics
The onset of the syllable can be any consonant but ŋ and ʔ. The nucleus has any vowel and possibly a medial which is one of the three high vowels, there are irregular limits to these. The coda can either be an high vowel but /y/ or an consonant which is either n, ŋ or ʔ. The final glottal stop (/ʔ/) only occurs in syllables with falling tones.

Every syllable carries a tone, which is either high, low or falling.

/s/ is pronounced as [ɕ] before high vowels or medials.

Initial consonants.
ㅇ is used when there is no initial consonant. Initial consonants.

Vowels and medials
for the y/i medial : add one stroke

for the w/u medial : add round vowel

rhimes with vowels in the coda span over multiple graphs

/u/ after /a/ (diphthongizing) is written as ㅗ (o)

Rhime table
all possible rhimes excluding tones. the zero initial consonant is used with every syllable.

Vehicles.
1the original chinese doesn't always have the same meaning, or sometimes any meaning alike.