Limpāshim

Limpāqim is a language primarily used by the Arcturians on the island of Arcturus. It seems to be related to the Nortfolk tongue that the Arcturians descended from. It uses a tri-consonantal root system for the majority of its words, with each word being in one of three genders masculine, feminine, or neuter. The language has also been adopted by the Fislankif Sect due to the large number of Arcturians present during the sect's founding.

History
The language of Limpāqim is believed to be a part of the Nortfolk language family. With the language splitting off from the other Nortfolk languages when the Arcturians migrated further north from the Archipelago. Due to their isolation and small population Limpāqim would hardly evolve, until the Arcturians migrated further south due to climate shifts. During the migrations the language would pick up words and elements of other languages, such as aver from Hanzeizh.

When the Arcturians settled on the island of Arcturus Limpāqim was the primary language used. However, as the years wore on and various empires influenced the island, it began to slowly fall out of use in favor of the languages of their neighbors. It is still used in the northern city of Fislankif where the culture is most dominant, but in the south it's mainly used as the tongue of the devout and religious.

Syntax
The default word order for Limpāqim is verb-subject-object. Adjectives come after the noun they modify and receive a suffix depending on the nouns gender. The three genders in Limpāqim are masculine, feminine, and neuter, with the verbs also reflect the gender of the noun with a suffix. Adjectives, and nouns also inflect for number either singular, dual, or plural. Dual is hardly used at all, with singular and plural being the most common.

Tri-Conosnantal Root System
Almost all words in Limpāqim are derived from one of the tri-consonantal roots. All verbs are conjugated based on their root, with the conjugation being done by placing specific vowels between the consonants of a root. There are also noun and adjectival forms, for example kizdā and kissā are both the noun form of their respective roots. Suffixes are added to the end of infinitive verb forms or noun forms of these roots to create additional words. Such as the word for writer being getiqbā, with the “bā” being a suffix attached to the infinitive form of the root g-t-q.

Articles
Articles act as prefixes in front of the noun, with articles only given to definite nouns. If it's not important enough to be definite it doesn't need an article. Articles also encode information about gender(masculine, feminine, neuter) and number(singular, dual, plural).

Sample Vocabulary

 * Kizdā - Meaning person.
 * Aver - loan word from Hanzeizh, meaning hail or praise.
 * Sitel - Limpāqim word meaning to praise.
 * getiqbā - Meaning writer, or someone who engages in the act of writing.
 * fislankif - Ancient word meaning, lifeless land.
 * Pegud mafep? - Semi-polite phrase meaning, "How are you?"