Drunal

Drunal is the third language of the Netherbelgs, preceded by Sveg in the north. This language is spoken by the western region.

Phonology
The Drunal phonology is based off the Dutch phonology; as Drunal is the Natrodian equivalent to Dutch.

Phonetic Rules
The following applies to rootwords:
 * Primary stress is usually placed on the first syllable unless the first syllable is not part of the root word (i.e. in seperable verbs, conjugations and prefixes), in which case the following syllable receives the stress.
 * Secondary stress is usually placed on the last syllable unless the last syllable is a declension, in which the syllable preceding the declesion gets the secondary stress.
 * E is pronounced /ə/ at the end of a word.
 * This is also true in Es in syllables proceeding stressed ones.
 * ER is pronounced /ɐ/ in the word-final position.
 * A, E and O are automatically pronounced as a double vowel (AA, EE and OO respectively) in the primary stressed syllable unless a double consonant proceeds it.
 * Doesn't apply to single syllable words.
 * A vowel with a diaeresis signifies it is part of another syllable and separates it from digraphs. These vowels are preceded with glottal stops.
 * É forces primary stress, so it is usually placed in the second syllable and functions like a normal E
 * Oke means oak and is pronounced /ˈo:kə/
 * Oké means okay and is pronounced /ɔˈke:/
 * Words beginning with a vowel are preceded with a glottal stop if necessary.

Word Order
The word order is taken from the language's sister language Exgot: Subject-Object inversion can occur and the verb comes at the end of subordinate clauses.
 * 1) Subject
 * 2) (Auxiliary) Verb
 * 3) Dative Object
 * 4) Adverb
 * 5) Object
 * 6) Preposition
 * 7) Locative Object
 * 8) Other Information
 * 9) Seperable part of a seperable verb
 * 10) Past Participle
 * 11) Infinitive [If auxiliary verb is used]

Verb Conjugation
Verb infinitives must always end in n but verbs that don't end in en are irregular.