Sentaguish

The Sentaguish alphabet
From the above table we have the following 29 letters in the Sentaguish alphabet.

A B C D E F G H I J L M N O P Q R Ʀ S T U V X Y Z þ ş ƻ çß

Stress
Stress is irregular and might occur in the last three syllables. Stress mark is grave accent' (`). In all vowel digraphs, apart from èi and ue, the stress is noted on the second letter.

Stress rules:

 * 1) Words ending in -ue cannot be stressed on the third-to-last syllable.
 * 2) Never stress digraphs ae or oe. When oe needs to be stressed it turns to eu. When ae needs to be stressed, the stress isn't noted at all
 * 3) In Functional mood of verbs the stress in on the last syllable. (For Group 1 verbs) In Subjunctive mood we keep the orthography the same but we move the stress on the pre-last syllable.
 * 4) Y when stressed is stressed with acute accent.
 * 5) Vowel digraphs are always stressed on the second letter. If they are stressed on the second letter, each letter represents a different sound (Eg. aì => /'e/ ài => /'ai/

Y
Y Phonotactics:

vwl. + y + vwl. -> /vjv/ eg. aye ->/aje/

cons. + y -> /ci/ eg. my -> /mi/

Diaelyted Y

vwl. + ÿ + vwl. -> /viv/ eg. aÿe -> /aie/

consonant + ÿ -> /cj/

Ending Y

- vwl. + y -> /vj/ eg. -ay -> -/aj/

- vwl. + ÿ -> /vij/ eg. -aÿ -> /aij/

To pronounce ending y before a vowel /i/ we transform it to ii. In other words, ii indicates an y that had to be pronounced /i/

-aii -> /ai/

E
Ending E

-e -> /e/ eg. fe -> /fe/

vwl + consonant + ë -> /vc/ eg. ifë -> /if/

-ILLE
-ille -> /ij/

-èille -> /aij/ -èille = aÿ

LL in -ille is pronounced /j/

E in -ille isn't pronounced at all

To reset -ille /ij/ to /iʎe/:

Put diaelytic mark on e:

-illë -> /iʎe/

C/CH/G/ Ʀ - QU/GU/Y/HU
c/ch/g/Ʀ + a, o, ou, ae, au, oi, èi, => k/x/ɣ/g

C + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui -> Qu + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui => c

Ch + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui -> Hu + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui => ç

g + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui -> Gu + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui => ɟ

vwl + Ʀ + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui -> vwl + Y + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui => j

cons. + Ʀ + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui -> cons. + Ÿ + e, i, u, oe, iè, ai, eu, ui => j

S /s/ vs. /z/
consonant + s => /s/

s + voiceless consonant => /s/

vowel + s + vowel => /z/

vowel + s + voiced consonant => /z/

s vs. ss vs. ç
vowel + ss + vowel => /s/

vowel + ç + voiced consonant => /s/

Verbs
Verb is a word used to describe an action or a state. They form 105 different forms according to their tense, mood and person.

Tenses
On the table below thare are all tenses of Sentaguish and their descriptions:

Moods
On the table below there are all moods used in Sentaguish, and their descriptions:

Persons and numbers
On the table below you will see all persons and numbers:

Voices
On the table below there are all Sentaguish voices and their desriptions: Because the inflection of the verb doesn't change according to its voice, the table below show how to recognise a verb's voice.

Aspects
Aspects are expressed by time expressions that show a period of time, certain (for an hour) or uncertain (for hours)

Verb group 1: verbs ending in consonant + vowel (digraph) (CV verb scheme)
We dispose of the vowel (or vowel digraph) and form the tenses according to the table below. These verb tense forms correspond to the 1st singular person. On the table below you will see inflections for each tense of a Group 1 Verb:
 * Infinitive is the basic form of a verb that is used to refer to the verb. It is neither a tense or a mood

Verb Group 2: verbs ending in consonant (VC verb scheme)
We don't dispose of any letters as the last consonant of a verb shows its stem, which remains in all forms.

E.g. The stem of naloì is nal-. The stem of pùƦ is pu'Ʀ.

We use the Group 1 endings to form the verb conjugations.

Verb Group 2, however, forms a subjunctive form too.

Verb Group 3: Irregular verbs
Irregular verbs have irregular changes to their stem apart from the endings above. Most verbs ending in -Ʀ are irregular. Irregular verbs form Subjunctive as VC but they don't form Indefinite Tense (as CV).

Nouns
Nouns have 6 cases and 2 numbers.

Group A: nouns ending in a vowel (digraph) (CV/VV)
The basic rule is that they form their cases and numbers like that: The following suffices are added:
 * - means no change to nominative

Group B: nouns ending in a vowel (digraph) before a consonant (VC)
The vowel changes according to the table below:

Group C: Nouns ending in double consonant (CC)
We add the following suffices at the end of the word