Behru cesik

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Béhru cesik shúune viine yoone hok.


Template:Progress Template:Conlang Info


Setting

Behru Cesik (a combination of Behru, an ethnonym, cet, to speak, and the suffix -hik, indicating a manner of doing something) is a language spoken in the southern half of the lower Sedonese basin, the Hedri plains, and in the northern portions of Kakinsake. Its speakers form a distinct ethnicity in the south of Sedone, independent from the dominant Idili. The Behru people originated from the distant and now extinct Behru empire, which attempted to settle the Hedri area 1500 years prior. The empire has collapsed since then, and the Behru people are now isolated, their nations being increasingly encroached upon by the native peoples they had once tried to conquer.

Phonology

Consonants

Bilabial Dental Alveolar Post-alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyngeal
Nasal m hm n hn ñ hñ ng hng
Plosive p b t d c j k g
Fricative f v s z sh zh x gh
Affricate
Approximant w hw hy h
Trill
Flap or tap
Lateral fric.
Lateral app. l lh r hr
Lateral flap

Vowels

Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
Close i u
Near-close e î ü
Close-mid
Mid ë o
Open-mid
Near-open
Open a


Phonotactics

All Behru free morphemes of native origin consist of a 2 syllable root with a maximum structure stop-fricative-approximant-vowel/syllabic l or r-consonant-vowel. Bound morphemes are permitted to have a reduced structure, so long as they start witha consonant should they be allowed to occur word initially. All syllables must start with a consonant. Alll free roots except particles and nouns in the agent case singular have a suffix of some sort indicating their grammatical role in the sentence.

Vowels

All roots that can exist unbound, along with several bound roots, hold a tone. This tone may be either a high ´tone like in lé, or a low tone le (low tone is unmarked). A high tone is only found in noun, verb, and particle roots, it is never found on the suffixes with the exception of several toneshift sandhi rules.  In addition, a vowel may be of one of 3 "strengths". A weak vowel is reduced and centralized, and may carry have a high tone. A medium vowel is clearly pronounced but clipped in length. A strong vowel is held out in length. Some roots contain the sequence CV l/r C(V). The combination of a vowel and and l and r usually fuse in an unusual way.

Vowel strength
Weak ë ë i ü l r
Strong a o e u ol, el* ar, er*
Prolonged aa oo ii uu ul, il* or, ir*
  • roots containing l or r may strengthen according to two different series.

Sandhi

Sandhi in behru can be divided into two categories, tone sandhi and consonant sandhi. Vowel sandhi only occurs word internally, as all morphemes that can occur at the front of a word start with consonants.

Consonant sandhi

Rule 1: first consonant agrees with second consonant in voice if both are stops or fricatives
k,x,c,sh,t,s,p,f when followed by g,gh,j,zh,d,z,b,v become g,gh,j,zh,d,z,b,v

n assimilates in the point of articulation of the following consonants

n when followed by k,g,x,gh ng becomes ng
n when followed by c,j,sh,zh,ñ becomes ñ
n when followed by p,b,f,v,m becomes m
Rule 3: palatalization of dental consonants
t,d,s,z when followed by y combine with y to become c,j,sh,zh


Rule 4: y and w dissimilate before matching vowels
y when followed by i becomes zh
w when followed by u becomes v
Rule 5: combining palatal and dental sounds
s,sh,t when followed by sh combines with sh to become c
z,zh,d when followed by zh combines with zh to become j
Rule 6: h weakens unvoiced stops
k,c,t,p when followed by h (only if h is in isolation) combine with h to become x,sh,s,f
rule 7: h aspirates liquid and nasal consonants
y,r,l,w,ng,ñ,n,m when followed by h become hy,hr,hl,hw,hng,hñ,hn,hm
Rule 8: aspirated liquids and nasals devoice preceding stops and fricatives
g,gh,j,zh,d,z,b,v when followed by h (only if h is in isolation)

become p,x,c,sh,t,s,p,f, and the h disappears

Rule 9: w and y become v and zh when not followed by vowels, and vice versa
w and y

when followed by another consonant

and preceded by a consonant

become u and i


Rule 10: Progressive devoicing
k, p, t, c, s, sh, f, x When in contact with any liquid nasal Devoice said liquid or nasal, eg; k+n = khn, m+t=hmt
  • note: The effects of rule 10 are never written, as they can always be determined, samt will always be pronounced as |sahmt|, no rules can reverse this.
Rule 11: regressive devoicing
g, b, d When followed by an aspirant liquid or nasal directly, or if followed seperated from the aspirant by a short vowel become k, p, t, eg; g+hy=ky, bu+hm+ puhm, but daa+ hn doesn't equal taahn, because of the long vowel
Rule 12: intervocalic voicing
k, t, p, even if preceded by a nasal or fricative Voice between two vowels. If a second consonant lies before, this consonant is also voiced. However, if a consonant lies after, this rule does not aplly aka becomes aga, efto becomes evdo, ampi becomes ambi, but akya deos not become agya


Notes: the only rules which can change the voicing of c and j are rules 2 and 7.

Only the rules 1, 2, 6, 7, and 8 occur across word boundaries. Final consonants affected by rules 6 and 7 across word boundaries double. The h doesn't dissapear of rule 8 occurs across word boundaries.

Vowel Sandhi

Rule 1: vowels have consonants inserted after or become consonants themselves when followed by other vowels
o,u when followed by e,i,î,a,o become ow,w
o,u when followed by u,ü become ov,v
e,i when followed by a,o,u,ü,e become ey,y
e,i when followed by i.î become ezh,zh
a when followed by any vowel dissapears

Tone Sandhi

If a vowel with a tone is weakened

múk to mügii

The tone is shifted to the following syllable

mügíi

If a vowel with a tone is converted into a consonant

like hí+e hye

The tone is shifted to the following syllable hyé

Orthography

Behru romanized orthography matches the symbols given in the phonology section. Sandhi is indicated always in both written systems. The Behru native writing system is an alphabet, with symbols for vowels, consonants, vowel strength and tone arranged into syllabic blocks, written up to down, left to right. Pictures of these will be uploaded later.

Basic Grammar

Gender Cases Numbers Tenses Persons Moods Voices Aspects
Verb No No Yes Yes Yes No Yes No
Nouns No Yes Yes No No No Yes No
Adjectives No No Yes Yes No Yes Yes No
Numbers No No No No No No No No
Participles No No Yes Yes No Yes Yes No
Adverb No No No No No No No No
Pronouns No Yes Yes No Yes No Yes No
Adpositions No No No No No No No No
Article No No No No No No No No
Particle No No No No No No No No

Behru in the modern day is highly fusional, although the language of old, in the days of empire, was far more agglutinative. This older stage of the language is popular in literature, but this article primarily focuses on the Hedri colloquial. All root morphemes of the language can be split into 4 groups. All free morphemes are part of onne of 3 parts of speech, verb, noun, or particle. Adjectives and adverbs do not exist as a part of speech, they can exist as either prefixes or derived from verbs. The language is most commonly uses a subject object verb word order, but there are no strict rules on word order in most sentences. The language is exclusively head final, with all modifiers placed before the head. The verb always comes a finally when it is the head of a clause, and is the only portion of the sentence that may not be omitted under any circumstances.

Morphemes

Free
Bound
Semantemes Verbs, Nouns adjectival prefixes, adverbial prefixes, derivational sufixes
Grammemes Grammatical particles grammatical sufixes, positional sufixes, grammatical infixes

Noun Morphology

Principle parts of a Behru noun.

Simple consonant variation nouns

A behru noun has 3 principle parts, the default, weak, and plural forms. The plural form is used in the plural (obviously), and the weak form is used in the patient, genitive, possesive, comparative, and compound cases.

Principle Behru nouns ending in a voiceless stop
Default Weak Plural
Type 1 múk, let, ksac, lóp mügáa, lidaa, ksëcaa, lëbáa múuge, liide, ksaaje, lóobe
Type 2 lart, kélc, náp, cwenk lrdii, klcíi, nëbíi, cwin'gii lorje, kíljie, náabye, cwiin'gye
Type 3 xámp, zholt, ghúc, juk xëmbúu, zhlduu, ghücúu, jüguu xáambwe, zhuldwe, ghúujwe, juugwe
Simple variation vowel nouns

Default

Weak Plural
lube, nago, mwaco, xéde, sráje lübii, nëgoo, mwëcoo, xidíi, srëjíi luubeye, naagowe, mwaacowe, xíideye, sráajeye

Complex variation nouns

Palatal nouns
Default Weak Plural
Voiced stop base Type 1 perji, ñélji, yúgi, tóbi prjiaa, ñljiáa, yügyáa, tëbyáa piirjrye, ñíljlye, yúugïngye, tóobüvye
2 náji, húji, tségi, tólbi nëjjíi, hüjjíi, tsïgzhíi, tlbzhíi náajrye, húujlye, tsíigïngye, túlbüvye
3 hloji, xworji, ryagi,  vyúbi hlëjiuu, xwrjiuu, ryëgyuu, vyübyúu hloojrye, xwurdlye, ryaagïngye, vyúubüvye
Voiceless base type 1 gzhéci, dloci, numgi, sólbi ghiciáa, dlëcaa, nümkyaa, slpyáa ghzíicrhye, dlootlhye, nuumkïhngye, súupüfye
2 móbi mëpshíi móopüfye
3 pláci plëcáa pláatlhye


Labial nouns
Default Weak PLural
Voiced 1 ráju rëjwáa ráajrwe
2 hwogu hwëgwii hwoogüngwe
3 sandu sëndvuu saandlwe
Voicless 1 zlecu zlicwaa zliicrhwe
2 hméldu hmltwíi hmíltlwe
3 shúbu shüpfúu shúupüfwe


Historically ejective nouns
Default Weak Plural
frábe, lyóndi, shriju, tógo frëbíi, lyëndíi, shrijuu, tëgóo fráabüveye, lyóondlye, shriijrwe, tóogëngowe


Intervocal stop nouns
Default Weak Plural
tádo, kluge

ñárce, sábo

tëdóo, klügii

ñërcíi, sëbóo

táadowe, kluugeye

ñórjeye, sáabowe


Fricative nouns
Default Weak Plural
Simple voiceless dvasa, tómfa, rwéshu, zumxe dvësaa, tëmfáa, rwïsháa, zümxaa dvaatse, tóompfe, rwíiccwe, zuumkkeye
Complex voiceless clúso, kólfe, bváfi, hyaxe clüsóo, klfíi, bvëfii, hyëxii clúutlhowe, kúlpüfeye, bváa
Voiced tevo, ñúzo, lazhe tivoo, ñüzóo, lëzhii

tiivüvowe, ñúuzlowe,

laazhreye


Liquid and nasal nouns (4 parts)
Default consonant Default Vowel Weak Plural
shúun, ryaam, pshiing shúnz, ryamv, pshen'g shüné, ryëmé, pshingé shúunde, ryaambe, pshiin'ge
jáal, kóor jáls, kórsh jëlé, këré jáahle, kóohre

Basic endings

Endings using the first principle part

Singular Paucal
Stop Consonant/schwa Vowel Stop Consonant/schwa Vowel
Agent - - ii, uu zh, v
Causative ëye ye iizhe, uuve zhazh, vazh
Ablative ehn kihn iiñi, uum ñzh, ma
Comitative ent kint iiñzhu, uumzhu ñzhu, mt
Benefactive empi kimpi iiñibi, uumpi ñip, map
Vialis or vr iiren, uuren zhrn, vrn
Instrumental l l iyan, uwan zhën, vën
Adessive mazh mazh iimi, uumi zhmi, vmi
Locative hi hi iishi, uushi zhi, vi
Dative ci ci iic, uuc shc, fc
Patientive *see 2 yan, wan *see 2 zhan, van
Posessive *see 2 ino, uno *see 2 zhño, vno
Comparative *see 2 ihno, uhno *see 2 shno, fno
Genitive/ Combining stem *see 2 in, un *see 2 zhñi, vnë

These endings can be added to the 1st prinicple part of the noun using sandhi. One thing must be noted for consonant nouns, nouns ending in a simple voiceless stop will often have a semivowel inserted between the consonant and the ending. Which semivowel is inserted requires knowledge of the second principle part, nouns ending in an ii, like mügíi, will have a y inserted, nouns ending in an uu will hae a w inserted. Nouns ending in aa have nothing inserted. Therefore, the noun múk, mügíi, múugye, will have a y inserted in the ablative (múkyehn), as that ending starts with the vowel e, and múk's second principle part ends in ii.

Endings using the second principle part
Patientive ha
Possessive ng
Comparative ho
Genitive/combining stem -


Endings using the third principle part
Consonant Vowel
Agent e e
Causative ëye zhe
Ablative aman aman
Comitative amant amant
Benefactive amampi amampi
Vialis ren ren
Instrumental l hl
Addessive mazh mazh
Locative ëzh zh
Dative ëc c
Patientive VhVVm* VhVVm*
Posessive mo mo
Comparative ëhmo hmo
Genitive/Combing stem ëm m
  • V means vowel of the second syllable, which is reduplicated. Schwa endings do not reveal the final consonant in vowel ending nouns.

Consonant declension

Voiceless consonant ending

K-nouns group 1 animate, múk, múge, mûgíi (dog-like animal)
Single Paucal Plural
Agent múk múgii Template:Hpc
Causative múgëye múgiizhe Template:Hpc
Ablative Template:HpcTemplate:Hpc múgiiTemplate:Hpc Template:HpcTemplate:Hpc
Comitative Template:HpcTemplate:Hpc múgiiTemplate:Hpc Template:HpcTemplate:Hpc
Benefactive Template:HpcTemplate:Hpc múgiiTemplate:Hpc Template:HpcTemplate:Hpc
Vialis Template:Hpc múgiiren Template:Hpc
Instrumental múkl múgiyan Template:Hpc
Adessive múkmazh múgiimi Template:Hpc
Locative múxi múgiishi Template:Hpc
Dative múkci múgiic Template:Hpc
Patient Template:Hpc múgiyan Template:Hpc
Posessive Template:Hpc múgino Template:Hpc
Comparative Template:Hpc múkihno Template:Hpc
Genitive/Combining form Template:Hpc múgin Template:Hpc

1: stems marked in Bold require knowledge of the invisible vowel, always marked in the second principle part

2: stems marked in Template:Hpc are formed off of the second principle part

3: stems marked in Template:Hpc are formed off of the third principle part

4: endings marked in Template:Hpc use the ablative stem, and are similar across all nouns. Forming the ablative stem require knolwedge of both the first and second principle parts.

Endings added to the combining stem

These endings are added to the combining stem, and must themselves be declined before the noun is used. These nouns may only be declined in the dative, locative, vialis, and ablative. They are effectively "prepositional nouns".

Combining stem endings
Locative Dative Vialis Ablative
Location in time jep sañci jut min
Within ne neci nut nehn
Outside re reci rut rehn

Showing that a noun is posessed.

If a noun is owned by another noun (marked in the posessive case), an infix is inserted before the second consonant that agrees with the possessor. The genitive case is only used when one noun owns another noun, or with relations (my mother, your father). If one noun is part of the other noun, then a compound word using the combining stem is used instead. Inanimate objects always use the combining stem, never the posessive.

Posessive agreement infixes (and use with múk)
Singular Paucal Plural
1st person në, múnëk bi, múbik më, múmëk
2nd person xë, múxëk xi, múxik gë, múgëk
3rd person lü, múlük zi, múzik lnë, múlnëk
4th person pl, múplk

The possessed nouns may be further declined, múbik (our dog), múbigii (our dogs), múbigiiñipi (for our dogs).


Verb Morphology

Behru verbs are conjugated by factors, person, number, transitivity, tense aspect, and mood. Many Behru sentences consist of only a verb, as both the subject and object may be dropped if they can be determined by context.

Irrealis stem formation

Command stem formation

Lengthen core vowel

weaken second vowel (if applicable)

devoice final consonant if ending in n, m, ng, l, or r

cet to ciit! speak!

yul to yuuhl! walk!

mála to máalë! move (it)!

add no if intransitive (don't add it if the verb is inherently intransitive)

máalëno! move (yourself)!

add ji if referring to a group of people

yuuhlji walk, all of you!

máalënoji! move, all of you!

The command stem is used for the imperative. Also, the command stem can be used to make a "future certain" or a self command with the first person basic subject suffixes.. Cìtu means "I will speak" and shows strong intention, and zínuv means "we will go".

Tense and aspect

Formation of past and future tenses

To form the past tense of a verb

like cet

add li before the final syllable of the stem

cet to celit

To form the future tense of a verb

like mála

add ni before the final syllable of the stem.

mála to mánila



Formation of the progressive

To form the progressive tense of a verb starting or containing a consonant cluster ending in a consonant, fricative, y, hy, w, or hw

like cet, féde, tádo, yul

Insert an infix after the first consonant consisting of the weakened first vowel and a voiced fricative of the same point of articulation as said consonant

cizhet, fivéde, tëzádo, yüzhul

(notice, verbs starting in c, j, sh, zh, and ñ can use z or zh depending on whether they sonorize with an l [use z] or and r [uze zh]

To form the progressive of a verb starting in a nasal

like ñen, muk, hnédo, ngyoba

do the same as above, but add a nasal consonant before the consonant infix (ñ is treated like n, ng uses n'g

ñinzen, mümvuk, hninzédo, ngyën'goba

To form the progressive of a verb starting in or having a consonant cluster ending in r or l

like rop, zhlún

reduplicate lV or rV, and weaken first syllable

rërop, zhlülún

Passive and causative formation

The passive is formed by palatilizing the last consonant in the first consonant cluster (adding a y). The causative is formed by labialization of that same consonant. The first vowel is lengthened in both forms. Some initial consonants/ consonant clusters must be sonorized before being palatalized or labialized. The passive stem is included in the principle parts to show whether or not this happens.

How to sonorize an initial consonant/consonant cluster
Initial consonant/ final consonant in cluster.
x add ëhng
g, gh add ëng
ky, xy, hngy add ihng
kw, xw, hngw add ühng
gy add ing
gw add ung
c, j, sh, zh, ñ, nw, hñ, hnw add r or l
ly, lw add r
d, s, z, tw, dw, sw, rw, ry, hry, hrw add l
b, v, bw, mw add üv
by, vy, my add iv
pw, fw, hmw add üf
py, fy,hmy add if
y change to ghi
w change to ghü
hy change to hi
hw change to hü

Note- a cluster ending in a y or w loses that y or w in sonorization

The sonorant then takes the place of the original consonant for palatalization or labialization.

Polypersonal agreement

The Behru verb agrees with its preformer, or subject, in person and number. A transitive verb also agrees with its object in person, subject, and number. Verb endings are added to the stem in the same manner noun endings are.

Intransitive verb participant agreement
Singular Paucal Plural
1st person u bu ji
2nd person xa xu xe
3rd person hlo zu hlon
4th person ril
Nominal form
Singular Paucal Plural
1st person emi ebi eji
2nd person ejri enang ejre
3rd person olasha angude olesha
4th person ehwe
Descriptive form
Singular Paucal Plural
lyu lav lyon
Transitive verb subject-object agreement

Object>

subject

1

single

1 paucal 1 plural 2 single 2 paucal 2 plural 3 animate single 3 animate paucal 3 animate plural 3 inanimate single 3 inanimate paucal 3 inanimate plural 4th p
1p one - - - utto emru emir wan azhbu une i idu idan iga
1p few - - - eco dav de izha linu izhe bi bidu bidan igav
1p many - - - uttwe emeru emezhr wen ezhbu wene jie jiedu jiedan ige
2p one nim odasa iwa - - - lit kendu afnan xi xidu xidan koga
2p few nimu odasu ivu - - - lic kshindu ifnan xizh xizhdu xizhdan kogav
2p many nime odase iwe - - - lesht kyendu efnan xe xedu xedan koge
3 single ova ufingu lam ocik ocikyu ociigye raya kabu uzhgan ri ridu ridan yavba
3 paucal izo zidu izom ohan ohanu ohaane iben nimu angizh zi zidu zidan sinav
3 plural eva ufengu lem ocek ocekyu ociigye rezh kebu wezhgan ehli ehlidu ehlidan yavbe
4th person ogañi ogamu ogañe ozhdo ozhdov ozhdwe otsa odzu otsan oci ocidu ocidan -


Participial endings
1 single 1 paucal 1 plural 2 single 2 paucal 2 plural 3 animate single 3 animate paucal 3 animate plural 3 inanimate single 3 inanimate paucal 3 inanimate plural 4
1st single - - - amo emark amar upor uzhbuk upran er irap irant usuk
1 paucal - - - yazok dafk yezok ushk ulnuk ushken ber birap birant ufuk
1 plural - - - emo emerk emar wepor wezhbuk wepran jier jierap jeirant wesuk
2 single oxon odak onok - - - ucohya ahmase fok ujri ujrip ujrint akashk
2 paucal ixan idak inak - - - ucac ahmac fac inang inangap nangant ikashk
2 plural oxen odek onek - - - ucehye ahmese fek wejri wejrip wjerint akeshk
3 single osar lert ason uvlak uvlagu uvlaage osep aksap osek ulasha ulashap ulashant azehl
3 paucal azhar efek azhek usunk usungvu usuungwe wanar nik waner ingut ingudep ingudent idun
3 plural esar ledi asen uvlek uvlegu uvliige esep aksep esek ulesha uleshap uleshant azehna
4 yagun yagbin yagman yagak yagin yagek yaksha yakshun yakshe yahwe yahwep yahwent


Descripitive endings
Other preformer 1st person singular 1 paucal 1 plural 2 singular 2 paucal 2 plural 3 animate singular 3a paucal 3a plural 3 inanimate singular 3in paucal 3in plural 4
Described subject sop udbi somt sok sogu soge mav olvu mev tek tekyup tekyunt fazh
Described object bak bik omsa igazh igizh igezh wor ihru wer pash pabi pañci dwo

Deriving verbs to nouns

Nominalizing suffixes
ka (irregularily declined) gerund, cètka would mean speaking. Often used to form abstract nouns, málaka means "movement"
zo inanimate object associated with the verb (often imparts an irregular meaning which must be learned independantly) cèdzo would mean "words, speech)
hen means -er in english, also used to indicate the inhabitant of a location, cèsen would mean speaker, kìdilihen would mean an idili person.
hik means "a way of doing something, method". cèsik would mean "language"(way of speaking)
ya indicates an instance or cycle, can be used for both nouns and verbs. Typically paired with a number prefix, ñecèca would mean "third speech"
co indicates an event, such as in màcco "the event of peace"
láng means the same thing as -ness in english, added to the descriptive stem of a verb, as in xùweláng "livelyness, health"

Behru syntax

Verbs that incorporate nouns

Behru has no independant copula. Instead -lòn is suffixed to a noun to change it into a to be verb, for example

sùmúk mejwòjalóhnro This dog isn't a cat. Other verbs are changed into suffixes like this as well, for example, -lór (to become, as in yùmúk jwòjakóllehrro that dog became a cat. The third major incorporating verb is -lû´r (to make) as in

mebóloniyéyejuv? can't we make bolo?

Because adjectives are ensentially altered forms of verbs, they can be considered to have the copula "built in" and do not need any

Numbers

Behru has a base 12 numbering system. Simple numbers are simply suffixed after the nouns they count. The result is then declined like a noun.

1 mu 12 gu 144 sran 1728 ghwe 20736 sha 248832 gusha

429981616

sisha

8916100448256

sifosha

12^16

siñesha

2 fo

24

fu

288 fowan 3456 fowe

41472

fosha

497664

fusha

859963232

fosisha

etc etc
3 ñe

36 ñu

432

ñeyan

5184

ñewe

62208

ñesha

746496

ñusha

etc

4

ber

48

bru

576 beran 6912 berwe etc etc
5 dat 60 datu etc etc
6 hmye 72 hmyu
7 vel 84 vlu
8 fer 96 fru
9 niñe 108 niñu
10 suk 120 suku
11 ruse 121 rusu

Compound numbers.

To make complex numbers, like 25, or 156, one strings together the simple numbers in a sequence of addition from the biggest to the smallest number.

25: fumu fu(24) and mu(1)

156: srangu sran(144( and gu(12)

157: srangumu

305: fowanggudat

when a number is affixed to a noun, it is declined like a noun. Typically, the penultimate vowel takes a ` accent and is subject to vowel strengthening or weakening. For example, 25 beds would be mùkfùmu, but if declined in the owner case, it would be mùkfümungò, and in the direction case, it would be mùkfùmuhi. 10 beds would be mùksùk. towards the (12^12)*11 people would be shúnrusesifòshashi

Ordinal numbers

Behru ordinal numbers are formed simply by prefixing a number to a noun. They are usually prefixed to a noun like -tsék(place) or -ya (time, as in a cycle)

Fractional numbers

Fractions in Behru are formed by the suffix -t for numbers which end in a vowel and -ta for ones ending in a consonant. The fractions for half, third, fourth, and twelfth are formed irregularily. They are -kir, nisa, besa, and gusa. they are used the same way normal numbers are, mùkrusèt would be 1 eleventh of a bed. If one wishes to count the fractions, those numbers are suffixed past the fraction. mùksransùktaruse would mean "eleven 154ths of a bed"

Usage of numbers, and approximate quantities

A specific number is always declined in the "few" number, as the few number is considered to encompass all small or specific quantities. A general number, like -not, which means some, is considered a mass noun, and all mass nouns use the "many" case.

General quantity suffixes -hok: every,all -mok: none -hot: some -huk: most -muk: few

Number modifying suffixes: -sát: around, aprroximately -kère: only, just

Honorifics

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