primarysecondarytertiarysymbols
aah
e
iii
y
ouoo
www
tttch (fr)
k/gkk
jjjz/j (fr)
ddd
nnggng
hhh
l
sss (kr)
p/bppf
mmm
secondary sounds are akin to korean (kr) double consonants, with the exception being the vowel o, which is pronounced akin to strut. their defining feature is that they are short and punchy! tertiary sounds are more drawn out, such as the french (fr) ch and z/j sounds. y is always pronounced like a tertiary sound.
for 1st person plural, inclusive means "we + person being addressed", exclusive is vice versa. 3rd person object equates to "it". it isn't used for people (unless you're insulting them i guess?), nor is 3rd person s/pl. used for objects (unlike german). there are no gendered pronouns- diversity win!
symbolmeaning
dao
zero
one
two
three
four
five
six
seven
eight
nine
ten
personsubjectobjectpossessive
1st s.konkonyenkonfii
2nd s.nannanyennanfii
2nd pl.nanoiinanoyennanfoii
3rd s.sansanyensanfii
3rd pl.sanoiisanoyensanfoii
1st pl. incl.nonoiinonoyennanfoii
1st pl. excl.sanoiisanoyensanfoii
3rd objectdadayendafii
conlangenglishtense
sunggopresent simple / infinitive
ja sungare goingpresent continuous
kang sunghave gonepresent perfect
kang ja sunghave been goingpresent perfect continuous
iksunggonepast simple
ikja sungwas goingpast continuous
kang iksunghad gonepast perfect
kang ikja sunggonepast perfect continuous
yesungwill gofuture simple
yeja sungwill be goingfuture continuous
kang yesungwill have gonefuture perfect
kang yeja sungwill have been goingfuture perfect continuous