User:K1234567890y/Rural Basanawa

Rural Basanawa, natively known as Baasa Nusantara, Baasa Kampung, is a Malayo-Polynesian (constructed) language belonging to the Austronesian language family, it is considered to be a dialect of Malay and Indonesian, it is spoken on another planet called "Dë Niuland"(also called "Dë Niuwerld", Basanawa-dji: だ新世界), as the speakers were accidentally transferred by a wormhole to "Dë Niuland".

Rural Basanawa was once the most widely spoken of the Detch people, although the use of Rural Basanawa, the population of Rural Basanawa has been declined since the urbanization, and the number of total speakers of Rural Basanawa has been surpassed by that of Urban Basanawa, despite the urbanization process, the declination of the population of Rural Basanawa has stopped, there are still more than 40% of people who speak Rural Basanawa as their native tongue or one of their native tongues, many of the people who speak Rural Basanawa natively also speak Urban Basanawa as the other native tongue, simultaneous bilingualism is very common among the Detch people.

Rural Basanawa is heavily influenced by Urban Basanawa, and Rural Basanawa also has some influence on Urban Basanawa.

The name "Basanawa" is shared by two languages spoken by the Detch people, one is an Ingvaeonic West Germanic language, called "Urban Basanawa"; the other is an Malayic Malay-Polynesian language, called "Rural Basanawa", what is introduced in this article, is the "Rural Basanawa" language. Despite sharing the name and used by the same ethnic group, "Urban Basanawa" and "Rural Basanawa" belong to two unrelated language families.

Writing system
Rural Basanawa is largely a spoken language, there is no standard way to write Rural Basanawa, however, Latin-derived systems are commonly used to write Rural Basanawa, even long after Urban Basanawa had shifted to other writing systems.

Below are the transcriptions used in this article:

Grammar
Being a dialect of Malay language, the grammar is basically the same to that of Malay and Indonesian, a major difference is that Honorific forms of pronouns used in Malay and Indonesian(like saya "I, me(polite form)") are not used in Rural Basanawa.

Word Order

 * Basic word order: Subject-Verb-Object(SVO)
 * Adpositions are prepositions
 * Numerals precede the noun they modify, adjectives, demonstratives and relative clauses follow the noun they modify, adjectives can precede or follow the noun they modify(prenominal adjectives are more common)

Personal Pronouns
The Personal pronouns does not differ much from that of Malay and Indonesia:
 * 1st person singular: aku/-ku
 * 2nd person singular: kamu/-mu
 * 3rd person singular/plural: ia~dia/-nya
 * 1st person plural: kami(exclusive)/kita(inclusive)
 * 2nd person singular/plural: ëngkau/kau/-kau
 * 3rd person plural: dia orang


 * reflexive: diri

However, unlike Malay and Indonesian, honorifics are not a part of Rural Basanawa Pronominal system, polite pronouns of Malay and Indonesian such as "saya" are not used in Rural Basanawa.

demonstratives

 * This/these: ini
 * That/those: itu


 * Relativizer: yang

interrogative pronouns

 * Who: siapa
 * What: apa

Numerals

 * 1) one: satu/ësa/së-
 * 2) two: dua
 * 3) three: tigga
 * 4) four: ëmpat
 * 5) five: lima
 * 6) six: ënam
 * 7) seven: tudjuch
 * 8) eight: lapan
 * 9) nine: sëmbilan
 * 10) ten: sëpuluch/-puluch