Mijonasa

Phonotactics
The phonotactics of Mijonasa are (c)v(n). This means that you can only have a consonant at the end of a syllable if it is a nasal. This makes words like "jata" cv-cv, or "pento" cvn-cv. For the v part of the phonotactics rule, you need at least one vowel but it is actually possible to have as many as you want, which means that things like "theaioaure" are possible.

Writing System
Mijonasa does have a writing system which isn't the latin alphabet. It uses it's own abugida which is where, by default the consonant characters have vowels coming after them and you can use markings to change what vowel comes after them. In the mijonasa writing system you can also cancel the vowel after a nasal so you can make that the end of a consonant. This writing system does not have a digital version and is only possible with pen and paper. The table bellow shows the romanisation.

The actual writing system does not have any capitalisation but because most writing programs like Google Docs, Word, and Pages automatically make the first letter of a sentence a capital letter. It is easier to use them in the romanisation.

Nouns
There are a two noun cases, the genitive case (which I might not have used properly but I use it for possession), and the locative case. The locative case in mijonasa is not actually one case but 5 cases that bake different locations onto the noun.

All cases in mijonasa are marked with a suffix.