Halēnawega Script

Halēnawega (Ha: ꦲꦭꦼꦤꦮꦼꦒ) is a traditional writing system of Nevurusarese, along with other regional languages of Kada and Mejakepai. It is an abugida; it contains 23 unique characters, along with plenty of diacritic, punctuation, and epistolary marks.

Letter
A single letter of the Halēnawega script represents a single syllable. The core of each letter represents a consonant, and a system of surrounding diacritics determines the rest of the syllable's makeup.

Consonants
Consonants come with an inherent vowel of /a/. Further diacritics specifying other vowels may change the syllable, but in its unaltered form, each consonant represents that consonant in addition to an /a/ vowel. In certain instances, an unaltered form may also represent /â/.

Punctuation Marks
Punctuation marks are used in Halēnawega much like they would be used in other languages. The script notably lacks the use of a space, using a special mark for word separation instead.

Epistolary Marks
Epistolary marks are a more ceremonial system of markings used purely in artistic and documentative forms. The unique signatures of each caste are mandatory in tax returns and imperial addresses.

Due to the illiteracy of lower classes, usually they are only taught their caste signature. Unique caste signatures have become the primary way of identification in Mejakepai. Name signatures are still accepted, but are nowadays purely used as a sign of status.

Inspiration
Halēnawega is the conversion of the Javanese abugida for use in the Nevurusarese conlang. Most of its functions have been copied over to Halēnawega, but certain aspects, letters, and marks have been altered to better suit Nevurusarese.