Alel grammar
Orthography
Alel uses 23 letters of the Latin alphabet, leaving q, w and x unused. Each of them is pronounced as their respective IPA equivalents with four exceptions. The exceptions are c, which is pronounced as a voiceless postalveolar fricative, j, which is pronounced as a voiced postalveolar fricative, u, which is pronounced as a voiced labiovelar approximant when followed by another vowel and , y, which is pronounced as a palatal approximant. Occasionally, an apostrophe is used to indicate a glottal stop.
Articles
- There is no indefinite article [English a, an]; there is only a definite article al, alike for all genders, cases and numbers [English the].
- EXAMPLE
- ketab = book, a book
- al ketab = the book
Nouns
plural
- To form the plural, add the ending -t, or -at to words ending in a consonant. If a word ends in an alveolar plosive, then the endings -m, or -em respectively
cases
- There are three cases: nominative, accusative and genitive.
- EXAMPLE
- Al hunda jodabi al ulademin kucayon.
- DEF.ART dog.NOM chase.PAST.3SG DEF.ART boy.PL.ACC house.GEN
- The dog chased the boys' of the house.
- DEF.ART dog.NOM chase.PAST.3SG DEF.ART boy.PL.ACC house.GEN
- Endings:
- Nominative: Ø | Ø
- for the purposes of freeing up word order, the nominative endings an and yan may be used.
- Accusative: in | yin
- Genitive: on | yon
Adjectives
Adjectives follow the noun they modify and do not inflect for case or number. The comparative is made with the word yoc [English more], the superlative with gun [English most]; for the comparative the conjunction ke [English than] is used.
- EXAMPLES:
- Al hunda cakra jodi al muratin asud
- The brown dog is chasing the black cats.
- Al hunda ilha yoc cito ke al muratin asud
- The brown dog is larger than the black cats.
- Ama, al anaca ilha al gun cito o kul.
- But the human being is the largest of all.
Numerals
The basic numerals (not declined) are:
- ua - one
- ni - two
- uc - three
- yon - four
- go - five
- ca - six
- seb - seven
- ota - eight
- nen - nine
- da - ten
- sad - hundred
- hezra - thousand
--
- Tens and hundreds are formed by simple juxtaposition of the numerals.
- To show ordinal numbers we add -ma or -ema to numbers ending in a consonant; for multiples, the suffix –yoc or -eyoc; for fractions [actually, reciprocals], -ten or -eten; for collectives, -ku or -eku; for divisionals.
EXAMPLES:
- Hezra nensad nenda-go. = 1995.
- Al oza goma. = The fifth throne.
- Kusra niyoc. = A double error.
- Yoneten uc. = Three quarters.
- Niku. = A pair.
- Verabu hum na emla uc. = I gave them three apples each.