Nabekam

Nabekam is a constructed language with simple grammar mechanics. It was originally designed as a "parody" of Esperanto, which is the most popular constructed auxiliary language in the world. It borrows heavily on modified English words, as well a few from Spanish and Esperanto itself.

Etymology
Nabekam comes from the word nabekamas, the past tense form of bekamas meaning "become". "Nabekam" itself is a shortened form of "Nabekamas Nainglisaza" meaning "to become Anglicized".

Nouns
Nouns do always end in -o (yumano "human", rodo "road", skulo "school").

The noun inflection is as follows:

Verbs
The tenses of verbs in Nabekam are present, past, future, gerund, participle, infinitive and other more (e.g. "had arrived", "could have went", etc.)

Pronouns
The Nabekam pronouns are mi "I", i "you", hi/zi/ti "he/she/it", vi "we" and di "they".

To make them genitive, add -r to the end of the pronoun.

To add "-self" as in "yourself", add -ni.

Example: Hi lavas di un hini. "He loves them and himself."

Adjectives
Adjectives end in -a, as pronouns end in -r or -i, verbs end in -as, and nouns end in -o.

vaita "white"

haste vaita "whiter"

la moste vaita "the whitest"

vere vaita "very white"

vaitas "to be white" (possible)

estas haste vaitas kom hi "is whiter than him"

Adverbs
Adverbs end in -e. You can change adjectives into adverbs by changing the ending vowel into -e.

guda "good"

gude "well"

Prepositions and Conjunctions, Miscellaneous

 * 1) el = from
 * 2) al = to
 * 3) de = of
 * 4) an = in, on, at
 * 5) un = and
 * 6) sur = over
 * 7) son = so
 * 1) sur = over
 * 2) son = so

Negation
To negate in sentences, add not after the verb.

Plazas duvas not pihas an la floro. "Please do not pee on the floor."

Mi napovas not govas al mir rumo. "I couldn't go to my room."