Nevurusarese Language

The Nevurusarese language (Lâpung Nevurusaingâ, Halēnawega: ꦭꦺꦥꦸꦁ꧊ꦤꦼꦙꦸꦫꦸꦱꦫꦶꦚꦺ) is a Kadaic language spoken by the people of Mejakepai. It serves as the official language of Mejakepai and one of the Nakiles, the Queendom of Neruvusari.

The Neruvusarese language is known to have a reptilian sound to it, namely due to the majority population, the Javepakata species speaking it. The language is referred to as the Common Language, as it is spoken by every population and race within Kada.

History
Nevurusarese traces its roots back to a trade ledger that dates back over 600 years ago. The language had significantly taken shape when the Queendom of Neruvusari started to dominate the region. The language itself derived from a language known simply as Proto-Kadaic, which is currently undeciphered. Influences from Old Kunuvan (also undeciphered) can be found within the current form of the language, and has loan words that had been introduced into the language over the years.

Usage
Mejakepai uses Nevurusarese as an official language. It is used for documentation, governance, business transactions, and everyday conversation. It is taught to all native youth, as well as other imperial subjects. It has a large prominence within the Queendom of Nevurusari, as it is the origin of the language, as well as the Imperial Capital of Peiklaten, where foreigners usually learn the language to speak to the locals.

Low Nevurusarese
Bâdahpulange (Ha: ꦧꦺꦢꦃꦥꦸꦭ꧀ꦒꦼ), commonly referred to as "Low" or "Crude" Nevurusarese, is a dialect of the language which is used by Kada's non-Javepakata population.

It omits the hissed /ş/ sound, and ignores syllable stress and vowel length. Speakers of Low Nevurusarese also tend not to write using the Halēnawega script, instead opting to use the simpler and more practical Gimēnawega script.

Consonants
The /ş/ sound uses a hiss, something only the native Javepakata speakers can do. Foreigners are ought to use their own /s/ sounds instead of trying to butcher local pronounciations.

Half-Vowels
Half-vowels are /ng/, /n/, /h/, and /r/.

Morphology
Nevurusarese syllables are made up of at least one consonant and at least one vowel. In addition, half-vowels or vowels can appear at the beginning or end of each syllable. Half-vowels can appear as both consonants and vowels.

Syntax & Grammar
Nevurusarese has a word order of Verb-Subject-Object. Adjectives are treated as prefixes to nouns. Possessors of nouns come after them. A large collection of other noun affixes exist to further describe each noun.

Plural
Plural is expressed via partial reduplication. The final syllable of a noun in singular is repeated to create the plural form of that noun."Jave - Lizard, Javeve - Lizards"

Tense & Aspect
A system of verb affixes is used to denote both the tense and aspect of each sentence. Verbs can only have one tense, but also multiple aspects.

Vocabulary
The Nevurusarese vocabulary originates mostly within its parent language of Proto-Kadaic. Significant aspects of the vocabulary come from the Kunuvic and Koravic languages that are spoken in the region.

Pronouns
Notably, Rawâ and Rawâwâ are formal pronouns, used only for elders and individuals of higher caste.

Script
Nevurusarese is written in two primary scripts, Halēnawega, or traditional script, and Gimēnawega, or common script.

Halēnawega
Halēnawega (Ha: ꦲꦭꦼꦴꦤꦮꦼꦒ) is the traditional script whom with Nevurusarese has been written with for hundreds of years. It is an abugida, with each glyph representing a syllable. The core of each glyph represents the consonant, and a system of surrounding diacritics determines the rest of the syllable. The script also possesses an intricate system of punctuation and epistolary marks, used in both artistic and documentative writing. ꦭꦠꦼꦢꦮꦼꦰ꧊ꦏꦼꦩꦼ꧊ꦏ꧀ꦗꦴꦤꧏ꧉

-Nevurusarese traditional idiom written in Halēnawega

Gimēnawega
Gimēnawega is a modern script used to write Nevurusarese, created by new foreign influence in the region. It is an alphabet, with a unique glyph for each sound. The script is also used for the other languages of the region, such as Neo-Kunuvic and Koravic.