Xylonian

A - ah

B - beh

C - ch

D - doh

E - ey

F - eff

G - gah

H - heh

I - ee

J - jah

K - koh

L - lay

M - em

N - nih

O - oh

P - pih

R - rah

S - ess

T - tih

U - oo

V - veh

W - woh

X - zeh

Y - eye

Rules + Exceptions:

Adding an h after a vowel makes the vowel short (o and a are the exceptions)
example: ih, eh, uh (sound like they're spelled) while i, e, and u sound like the actual alphabet sounds
If there is a vowel after the h then the above rule is void, the h must be pronounced (however, if there are two h's, the above rule still goes into effect)
example: ehe = ey-hey while ehhe = eh-hey

i = feminine
o = masculine
a = neutral
there are exceptions... saka = masculine and not neutral

Vowel'vowel (such as a'a or i'i) means the vowel is repeated
a'a = ah-ah, i'i = ee-ee
teli'i = tey-lee-ee

if there is an i before any other vowel, the two combined make a y sound
ie = yay, ia = yah, etc.
if there is an apostrophe before the vowel and after the i, the two are two distinct sounds
i'e = ee-ey, i'a = ee-ah, etc.

to make something a plural, add an a to the beginning and a k to the end
if there is already an a at the beginning of the word, then put an apostrophe between the two a's
if there is already a k at the end of the word, then an apostrophe is put in between the two k's and the sound of the vowel before the first k is repeated
sing. Nok (nohk)
pl. Anok'k (ah-nohk-ohk)

to make an "aah" sound (like the a in "cat), the a must be repeated without the apostrophe (aa)
so to pronounce cat in xylonian, the spelling would be "kaat"

ck makes a sh sound, c'k makes a chk sound (kind of like a lock clicking)

sentence order: practically anything goes, but the most commonly used sentence orders are:
subject, direct object, verb, OR direct object, verb, subject
but again, if you mix things around, you'll still be understood.
adjectives go after whatever they're describing unless the adjective is size/number

to make a verb into an adjective, add an et to the end. if there's already an e, just add the t. THIS IS ONLY FOR VERBS TO ADJECTIVES, OTHER ADJECTIVES DON'T FOLLOW THE RULE

Adjective endings:
positive = -
comparative = -mio
superlative = -lumy
if the adjective ends with the first letter of the ending, then an a is added after the last letter and before the ending

Verb endings:

Pres:
I = e We = ena
You = y Y'all = yna
He = o They (masc.) = ona
She = i They (fem.) = ina
It = a They (mixed/unknown/neu.) = ana

Imperfect Past:
I = kel We = kenal
You = kyl Y'all = kynal
He = kol They (masc.) = konal
She = kil They (fem.) = kinal
It = kal They (mixed/unknown/neu.) = kanal

Perfect Past: ADD AN E BEFORE THE ROOT WORD
I = nera We = nenara
You = nyra Y'all = nynara
He = nora They (masc.) = nonara
She = nira They (fem.) = ninanra
It = nara They (mixed/unknown/neu.) = nanara

Infinitive Verb Endings:

-no

Nominative:
I = Ce We = Ceta
You = Ey Y'all = Eyta
He = Xeh They (masc.) = Xeho
She = Xa They (fem.) = Xahi
It = Vi They (mixed/unknown/neu.) = Viba

Accusative:
Cel Cetal|
Ela Elata
Xehl Xehlo
Xal Xali
Vil Vibal

Dative:
Cec Cetac
Eca Ecata
Xehc Xehoc
Xac Xahic
Vic Vibac

Possessive (genitive, maybe??):

Cema = mine/my Cetama = ours
Ema = yours Emata = y'all's's
Xehmo = his Xehomo = theirs (masc.)
Xami = hers Xahimi = theirs (fem.)
Vima = its Vibama = theirs (mixed/unknown/neu.)

States of being, present:
fi afik
fa afak
tok atok'k
tik atik'k
tak atak'k

States of being, imperfect past:
sanfi asanfik
sanfa asanfak
santok asantok'k
santik asantik'k
santak asantak'k

States of being, perfect past:
safti asaftik
safta asaftak
saftetok asaftetok'k
saftetik asaftetik'k
saftetak asaftetak'k



Dictionary (not alphabetized):

Saka: dad, daddy, papa (informal)
Sakaho: father (formal)
Sali = mom, mommy, mama (informal)
Salihi = mother (formal)
Xolsali = grandma
Xolsaka = grandpa, granddad
(adding xol makes it grand, adding xola makes it great, so xolaxolsali would be great grandma)
Seko = son
Seli = daughter
Teno = bro, brother (informal)
Tenoio = brother (formal)
Teli = sis, sister (informal)
Teli'i = sister (formal
Kihn = big
Kihnta = large
Ka = little
Kata = small
Leh = friend
Xo = man, male (human)
Xai = woman, female (human)
Un = yes
U'un = no (literally "not yes")
Nok = heart
Nanoa = soul
Koli'a = life
Fi'ikeno = to hurt
Fi'iket = hurt
Mani'ikno = to heal
Mani'iket = healed/healthy
Pe = god (pei = goddes, peo = god, pea = indeterminate gendered god)
Ra'askne = devil/demon
Pemi'e = holy
Peka = heaven
Sosokea = hell
Sanpeno = to bless
Sanpet = blessed
Myudno = to curse
Myudet = cursed
Pel = angel
Likop = fallen angel
Infeno = to go (to move go)
Denaino = to stop
Mehkla = hole
U = not
Cehnco = duh, of course, dumdum, silly, etc.
Nasme = bonded to the land
-ti = an affectionate nickname, doesn't really mean anything, just denotes love
Raespekno = to love
Raespeket = loved
Yk = sort of like "hey!" and is used to get someone's attention
Ckeukno = to come
Nolareno = to go (to leave go)
Nolaret = gone
Yla = greeting, like "yo" or "heylo" and is just very informal
Ona = and
Jikano = to talk
Sackacka = blah blah blah

Bad Words Dict.:
(Pe)(vil)Liwa = (God) DAMN (it)
(Pemi'e)Fona = (holy) SHIT
(Pemi'e) Sosokea = (holy) HELL
Foca = crap
Nana = fuck
Naca = frick
gehnli = bitch
Tona(mehkla) = ass (hole)
-nim = -ing (nacanim = fricking, gehnlinim = bitching)

Names:
Heli = feather
Koena = earth
Firn = forest
Kela = miracle
Caliri = caretaker
Sokli = heart/love
Lanfehl = laughter
Dimo = priceless
Dehnlo = clever
Jume = quick, keen
Gale = lion
Fiklen = little treasure
Lian = found
Nenu = patience
Tehma = knowledge
Ehmwe = cursed (originally beloved, but after a little girl with this name was cursed, the meaning changed)
Fen = shadowed meadow
Kofno = brave
Isi'o = heart/one
Ket = clear bell
Aleksi = defender/protector
Ickek = giver

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