Hesilinn

Setting
As Miri'e slowly began merging with Colossian to form High Colossian, Hesilinn began going extinct. The language survived only as an occult language, taught only to few, and as a means of safe communication. Those that learned it had to go through rigorous training to be initiated in the language. Those that speak it are highly revered.

Phonotactics
1. One permitable consonant cluster: s+h = ſ (IPA:/ʃ/)

2. Permittable vowel clusters (there will be more once I get an overview):

ae (written as æ or ei)

ai

ao

au

ei (written as æ or ei)

eo

eu (IPA: /ø/)(written as eu or ø)

ia

ie

iu

oa

oe (written as oe or ø)

oi

ua

ue

ui

uo

Pronouns
Usually pronouns in Hesilinn are part of the verb. For instance you'd usually say "Sei" (I am), whereas "A sei" would mean (I am).

Nouns
E - nouns:

These are nouns that have e, i or ae as the nucleus of the first syllable.

Adverbs
"Savas nere tona" - You're more beautiful than I

'Sav' (you are) is combined with '-nas'. The 'n' is cut, because Hesilinn doesn't allow most consonant clusters.

'nere' - is a comparative adverb reflecting back at a 2nd person singular verb. (Could also seem to be a nominative singular adjective (see note)

a - is the 1st person nominative singular pronoun, it is combined with 'ton' (than) to form 'tona'.


 * Note: If 'nere' was a nominaative singular adjective it would render the following sentence: "You are more than beautiful I". Although it seems to be saying something

"You are more than beautiful I" would be "Savas tona nere". Usually, it doesn't matter much where the adjective goes,

but in this kind of situation it could be confused with an adverb, therefore the rule of thumb is to have the adjective

follow directly after the noun it refers to. (Poets often make good use of this.)

Prepositions

Numbers
Majuscule letters are used for numbers, and the language uses Base-4.

To simplify, the first ten numbers are written like this:

A - B - D - E - EA - EB - ED - F - FA - FB

in the latin alphabet they're written like this:

A - Ba - Da - E - E'a - Eba - Eda - Fa - Fa'a - Faba

Example text
"Edei, seina to" - I think, therefore I am"

"Aſa seu ana mela na ſa?" - Who is this girl? (Lit. Which one is this girl?)