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Latest revision as of 14:58, 30 October 2012
Czásza (tʃa:ʃæ) is a slavonic language created in 2010 by A.D. Wood. It is based on the sounds of Polish, Czech and Romanian.
Alphabet
A Á B C D D̦ E F G Ğ I J K L Ł M N Ń O Ø P R Ř S Ś T Ţ U Ú V Z Ź
pronunciations
A - Sat
Á - Cake
B - Boat
C - Ts as in nits
D - Done
D̦ - J as in Jug
E - Pet
F - Fall
G - Good
Ğ - J as in French Je
I - In
J - Y as is Yob
K - Kill
L - Love
Ł - Polish, as in morał
M - Moon
N - Not
Ń - Spanish Ñ as in Sueño
O - Pot
Ø - Ur as in Urn
P - Pie
R - Run
Ř - Polish Rz as in Rzicz
S - Sun
Ś - Sh as in Shine
T - Turn
Ţ - Th as is Thorn
U - Put
Ú - oo as in Moot
V - W as in Wary
Z - Zoo
Ź - S as in Pleasure.
Grammar
Let's look at a sample sentence, 'I went to the shop'.
Verbs
To break this sentence down, we start with the verb 'to go' which in Czásza is Czáfe.
To turn this into 'I go' we put Ğ on the end (if the verb ends in a consonant, we put iĝ).
The tense is put at the beginning of the verb:
- past is Ij,
- present is Iaj, and
- future is Oj.
Our verb now looks like Ijczáfeğ - I went.
The word to is unnecesary, as I went and the object is enough to convey meaning.
Articles
The article 'the' is Łe, which stands alone if the noun begins with a consonant. If the noun begins with a vowel, you join it to the word like so: Ł'---.
The word for shop is ennerto so the shop is ł'ennerto.
The completed example sentence
Throughout that process, we can now make our sentence complete. Ijczáfeğ Ł'ennerto means 'I went to the shop.'