Phenotryptazine
Introduction
Covalent Greek (native name: phenotryptazine) is a language inspired by Greek, Welsh, chemical names, taxonomic names and IlL's Clofabosin.
Phonology
The phonemes are as follows:
| Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Dorsal | Glottal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | |||
| Unaspirated plosive | p /p/ | t /t/ | c, k /k/ | ||
| Voiced plosive | b /b/ | d /d/ | g /ɡ/ | ||
| Unvoiced fricative | ph /f/ | th /θ/ | s /s/, ll /ɬ/ | ch /x/ | h /h/ |
| Voiced fricative | v /v/ | z /z/ | |||
| Lateral | l /ɫ/ | ||||
| Rhotic | r /r/ | rh /ʀ~ʁ/ | |||
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| High | i /i/ | y /ɨ/ | ou, u /u/ |
| Mid | e /e/ | o /o/ | |
| Low | a /ɶ/ |
Covalent Greek has the following diphthongs: æ, ei /ɶi̯/ au /ɶu̯/ eu /eu̯/ œ /oi/ ue /ui/
Rhythiazolamide dialect
Morphophonology
Morphology
Nouns
Gender
Number
Case
Verbs
Syntax
Constituent order
Phenotryptazine is consistently head initial like Welsh.
Noun phrase
Phenotryptazine nouns come in two states: absolute and construct. The construct state is marked with -yl.