Eldurlac

Eldurlac (Eldurlac: /eld.ʏɾ.lɔts/) (Traveler's Tongue: /eld.ʏɹ.lak/) is a language spoken primarily in Southern-Central Serrona, primarily in the nations - both historically and presently - of Dejuria, Elduria, the Campfire Society, Notos, and Eros and as a minority language in the Federation of Southern Stars and the Vulperium. It is a member of the Lausán language family alongside other indigenous Serronan languages like Lo'Oi, Mari, and Kolsson.

Syntax, grammar, and sentence structure
Eldurlac follows a SVO (subject-verb-object) sentence structure, comparable to English and the various other Lausán language s.

If a verb is followed by the word 'luć' it indicates that the verb is in future tense, while if the word 'goć' follows a verb it indicates the past tense form of the verb. If not followed by either of these words, it is indicative of the present tense.

Two common suffixes in the language exist to indicate plurality and possession. The suffix '-ci' indicates plurality; if the word it is attached to normally ends with a 'c', 't', or 's', than only '-i' is added onto it. Following similar rules to '-ci', '-ca' is a suffix placed onto subjects to indicate possession of a following object. If the subject in question ends with a 'c', 't', or 's', than only '-a' is added onto it.

Phonology
 

Unique orthology
Many letters represent expected sounds that one may find in English/Traveler's Tongue, for example the phoneme /m/ is represented by the grapheme/letter 'm'. There are several unique orthographic features however to be aware of. Below is various notable orthographic writings of consonants, see the vowel inventory section in 'Phonology' for the orthography of vowels.


 * The letter R/r always produces the phoneme /ɾ/, which is a tapped rhotic sound.
 * The letter J/j always produces the phoneme /ʒ/, which can be seen in American English pronunciations of the word 'vision' or in most French uses of the letter J/j.
 * The letter C/c always produces the phoneme /ts/.
 * The letter Ć/ć always produces the phoneme /dz/.
 * The combination Th/th always produces the phoneme /θ/. This can be seen in most American English pronunciations of words like 'brother'.
 * The letter X/x always produces the phoneme /ʃ/. This can be seen in American English pronunciations of words like 'sheep'.