Rego Draconic

Natively known as: ïdëgo /ɪˈɾɛgo/

  ...and he stood holding his hat and turned his wet face to the wind...
hë du er siqï chë reqe hë dr̈agëo che er himad chadøga sood
Pronunciation: /hɛ du æɹ ˈsiqɪ ʧɛ ˈɹæqæ hɛ draˈgɛo ʧæ æɹ ˈhimaɾ ʧaˈɾøga soːɾ/
Rego Draconic word order: and he his hat holding stood and the wind to his wet face turned  

Spelling & Phonology

  Consonant inventory: d g h j k l m n q r s t v x z ɣ ɹ ɾ ʃ ʒ ʧ  
↓Manner/Place→BilabialLabiodentalAlveolarPalato-alveolarPalatalVelarUvularGlottal
Nasalmn
Stopt dg kq
Affricateʧ
Fricativevs zʃ ʒx ɣh
Approximantɹj
Tapɾ
Trillr
Lateral approximantl
  Vowel inventory: a aʊ̯ aː i o oː u æ ø ɛ ɪ   Diphthongs: aʊ̯ ?  
FrontBack
Highiu
Near-highɪ
High-midøo oː
Low-midɛ
Near-lowæ
Lowa aː
  Syllable structure: Custom defined ?
Stress pattern: Penultimate — stress is on the second last syllable ?   Sound changes (in order of application):  
  • t → d
  • ʃ → ʧ / V_V
  Spelling rules:  
PronunciationSpelling
æe
ɛ
ɪ
aʊ̯ou
r
ɹr
ɾd
ʒzh
jy
ʃsh
ʧch
xkh
ɣgh
VV
̯
 

Grammar

  Main word order: Subject (Prepositional phrase) Object Verb. “Mary opened the door with a key” turns into Mary with a key the door opened.
Adjective order: Adjectives are positioned before the noun.
Adposition: postpositions ?  

Nouns

  Nouns have two cases:
  • Nominative is the doer of a verb: dog bites man.
  • Accusative is the done-to of a verb: man bites dog.
NominativeAccusative
SingularNo affix
dizgï /ˈdizgɪ/ dog (doing the verb)
If ends with vowel: Suffix -q
Else: Suffix -æq
dizgïq /ˈdizgɪq/ (verb done to) the/a dog
PluralSuffix -iɹn
dizgïirn /dizˈgɪiɹn/ dogs (doing the verb)
Suffix -aʊ̯ks
dizgïouks /dizˈgɪaʊ̯ks/ (verb done to) dogs
 

Articles

  Rego Draconic has no definite article ‘the’, or indefinite article ‘a’.
 

Pronouns

 
NominativeAccusative
1st singularsøq /søq/ I chaa /ʧaː/ me
2nd singulardr̈ë /drɛ/ you choo /ʧoː/ you
3rd singulardu /du/ he, she, it doo /doː/ his, her, it
1st pluralsëks /sɛks/ we cho /ʧo/ us
2nd pluralcha /ʧa/ you all soo /soː/ you all
3rd pluraldr̈øks /drøks/ they khë /xɛ/ them
 

Possessive determiners

 
Possessive
1st singularchoo /ʧoː/ my
2nd singulardr̈aa /draː/ your
3rd singularer /æɹ/ his, her, its
1st pluralr̈e /ræ/ our
2nd pluraldur /duɹ/ your (pl)
3rd pluralhaa /haː/ their
 

Verbs

 
PresentNo affix
huk /huk/ learn
PastIf ends with vowel: Suffix -ɹ
Else: Suffix -æɹ
huker /ˈhukæɹ/ learned
Remote pastIf ends with vowel: Suffix -ɾ
Else: Suffix -oːɾ
hukood /ˈhukoːɾ/ learned (long ago)
FutureIf ends with vowel: Suffix -ɹlø
Else: Suffix -uɹlø
hukurlø /huˈkuɹlø/ will learn
 

Imperfective aspect

  The ‘imperfective’ aspect refers to ongoing actions, such as I am learning and habitual actions, such as I learn (something new every day).
Rego Draconic uses a standalone particle word for imperfective:  
ImperfectiveParticle before the verb: ʧaː -
chaa huk /ʧaː huk/ learns/is learning
 

Numbers

  Rego Draconic has a base-10 number system:   1 - o
2 - ern
3 - dr̈ër
4 - de
5 - khu
6 - dëq
7 - char
8 - r̈ooqa
9 - r̈a
10 - chamsï
100 - r̈ounsa
1000 - rës
 

Derivational morphology

  Adjective → adverb = If ends with vowel: Suffix -ɾ
Else: Suffix -æɾ
Adjective → noun (the quality of being [adj]) = If ends with vowel: Suffix -s
Else: Suffix -as
Adjective → verb (to make something [adj]) = Suffix -aː
Noun → adjective (having the quality of [noun]) = Suffix -aː
Noun → adjective relating to noun (e.g. economy → economic) = Suffix -ɛk
Noun to verb = Suffix -ɛ
Verb → adjective (result of doing [verb]) = If ends with vowel: Suffix -ga
Else: Suffix -aːga
Tending to = Suffix -aʊ̯q
Verb → noun (the act of [verb]) = If ends with vowel: Suffix -q
Else: Suffix -aq
Verb → noun that verb produces (e.g. know → knowledge) = Suffix -oːs
One who [verb]s (e.g. paint → painter) = Suffix -oːk
Place of (e.g. wine → winery) = Suffix -a
Diminutive = Suffix -aʊ̯ks
Augmentative = Suffix -ɪ
Language of = If ends with vowel: Suffix -ɾ
Else: Suffix -aɾ
Noun to adjective = Prefix æ-

Dictionary

3025 Words.
Root Languages
Spoken by

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