Korwedish
Koredish is the odd child of Korean and Swedish, with some oddities thrown in...
Word Order
Subject, Object, Verb
Postpositional
Nouns before adjectives
Grammatical Cases
Nominative (NOM) - subject
Accusative (ACC) – direct object
Dative (DAT) – indirect object, telling time (temporal)
Vocative (VOC) – addressing, calling
Genitive (GEN) - possession
Instrumental (INS) – by, means, tool
Topical (TOP) – topic, emphasis
Comitative (COM) – with
Locative (LOC) – location of
Vicinitive (VIC) – nearby
Lative (LAT) – movement to
Ablative (ABL) – movement from
Postpositional (PST) – used with postpositions
hus - house (NOM)
huswl - house (ACC)
huse - house (DAT)
husya - house (VOC)
huswi - house’s (GEN)
huswro - house (INS)
huswga - house (TOP)
huswa - with house (COM)
huswso - at house (LOC)
husege - near house (VIC)
huswge - to house (LAT)
huseso - from house (ABL)
husi - house (PST)
Verbs
Infinitive
The infinitive ends in -da:
seda - to see
varda - to be
hada - to have
gojrda - to do
sajda - to say
The root of the verb is the verb minus the -da suffix:
se
var
ha
gojr
saj
Conjugation
Verbs are not conjugated for person, hence the verb ending is the same regardless of person:
Na sejo - I see
No sejo - you see
Kw sejo - he/she sees
Go sejo - it sees
Vi sejo - we see
Ni sejo - you see
De sejo - they see
Interrogative mood
Na sejka? - I see?
No sejka? - you see?
etc.
File:Https://31.media.tumblr.com/23c41de638084fe28a6a9a9513fc957e/tumblr inline mylb28p4H41qbcmmr.jpg (work in progress)