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Inote

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Inote

Inote is the language of the Catmandir, a feline species from the planet Leo Epsilon IV, better known as Ikuna. It has 5 vowels and 7 consonants. They are as follows:

  • a as in father
  • d as in dark
  • e as in pen
  • i as in it
  • k as in kick
  • n as in nun
  • o as in got
  • p as in push
  • r as in run
  • s as in slush
  • t as in touch
  • u as 'oo' in book

All letters are pronounced, no matter what. There are no 'silent e's' in Inote, and no current irregularities.

Syllables

Inote syllables use this structure (C)V(C). There must be a vowel, and it may be followed by a consonant. Dicons are not permitted in Inote, nor are dipthongs. Thus ineru (to hunt) is permitted, while sant is not permitted.

Nouns

Nouns have three cases: nominative, objective, and posssessive.

  • Nominative is used as the subject of a sentence and is not changed from the base form.
  • Objective is used as the object of a sentence. An objective noun is modified by the addition of t- (if the word starts with a vowel) or ta- (if the word starts with a consonant) during the daytime and t- (if the word starts with a vowel) or te- (if the word starts with a consonant) during the nighttime.
  • Possessive is used to show ownership. A possessive noun is modified by the addition of n- (if the word starts with a vowel) or na- (if the word starts with a consonant) during the daytime and n- (if the word starts with a vowel) or ne- (if the word starts with a consonant) during the nighttime.

Sample nouns:

  • neteror-storyteller; na-/neneteror-storyteller's; ta-/teneteror-[done to] storyteller
  • okunus-rabbit; nokonus-rabbit's; tokonus-[done to] rabbit
  • porar-corn; na-/neporar-corn's; ta-/teporar-[done to] corn

Adjectives

Adjectives are placed before the noun, similarly to English. They do not agree with nouns as in some languages. Sample adjectives:

  • otar-other; En otar Inote.-The other catmandir.
  • ret-red; En ret pora.-The red nut.
  • ninorak-disloyal; En ninorak ninenek.-The disloyal slave.

Verbs

Verbs in Inote have three tenses: past, present and future.

  • Past is used to talk about thinks that have happened prior to the conversation or writing.
  • Present is used to talk about things that are happening at the same time as the conversation or writing.
  • Future is used to talk about things that will happen after the conversation or writing.

Verbs also have six persons and two temporal differentiators. These are:

  • 1st Person Singular-I do something
  • 2nd Person Singular-you do something
  • 3rd Person Singular-he, she, or it does something
  • 1st Person Plural-we do something
  • 2nd Person Plural-you (plural) do something
  • 3rd Person Plural-they do something
  • Daytime differentiator-the verb action occurred/occurs/will occur during the day. Events that happened at unknown times are automatically assumed to happen during the day.
  • Nighttime differentiator-the verb action occurred/occurs/will occur during the night.

These are represented by pronouns. All sample pronouns are in the daytime differentiator. To make them nighttime, change the beginning a- to e-.

  • Ane-I
  • Ate-you
  • Are-he
  • Ake-she
  • Ape-it
  • Anen-we
  • Aten-you (plural)
  • Apen-they

To conjugate an infinitive verb for the present tense (a verb ending in -ru), add the first two letters of the appropriate pronoun to the ending, reversing them and add -n for plurals (so ake becomes -ak, then -ka, while anen becomes-an, then -na, then -nan).

  • Ineru-to hunt; ineruna-I hunt
  • Iperu-to be; iperuka-she is
  • Inuru-to live; iperutan-you live (plural)
  • Inoru-to fight; inorupan-they fight

To conjugate for the past tense, change -ru to -ra and add the appropriate ending. For future tense, change -ru to -ro and add the appropriate ending.