Wimnish
Wimnish is an Irfikian language spoken in Wimna.
The language is spoken by approximately 28,000,000 people as a first language (about 15,500,000 of that as an only language), and a further 3.2 million as a second language. The language is written in the Wimnish script, a strange square-filled alphasyllabic alphabet with 24 letters; 5 vowels and 19 consonants.
The language is written in the SVO order and had 8 cases, they are: equative, dative, delative, ergative, accusative, adverbial, evitative and exessive. Below is a sample text, written and glossed, that uses all the cases so that you can see them in action.
The strange man shouted at me nastily. He was like a monster! He then changed from being monsterish, and he gave me candy!
Banlaham daxinmamol pilařakurgšant inamapil řanfamala. Nolma desantakisbašant. Milamol salsmakurg desantakisbalulminšant, milamol šuralmakurg inaminpil šukařamons!
Banlaham daxin-ma-mol řanfa-mala pilařa-kurg-šant ina-min-pil. Nolma desanta-kisba-šant strange man-def-ERG nasty-ADV shout-past-EVIT I-ACC-DAT he monster-EQU-EVIT Mila-mol salsma-kurg desanta-kisba-lul-min-šant mila-mol šuralma-kurg ina-min-pil šukařa-mons! he-ERG change-past monster-EQU-EXE-ACC-EVIT he-ERG give-past me-ACC-DAT candy-DEL
Below is this text in the Wimnish script:
Wimnish Cases
This is a quick overview of the cases, what they mean and how to use them in Wimnish.
Evitative Case
Most linguists will tell you that the evitative case is a rare one.