Grammar rules about the made up language part. 1?
16 years ago
General
From the moment you awake, you seen nothing but the Seventh Reality. You were born here, in my arms, and you are mine.
I have started updating the dictionary, not daily, in japanese only at this time.
So those may or may not be post.
Somewhat i can talk about right now is the grammar and rules about the language.
I'm not really good at making this writing formal, sorry.
Anyway.
The grammar about this language is,
When use for a name or something alike:
Adj. + Noun + (Other)
As simple as it is, or similar to any other languages. What makes it different is in this languages is that Adj. usually placed in a different position.
A regular complete sentence will be in follow order.
Subject + *Object + Verb + *Adj. + (Other/extra)
If take the Object out, says that there is no obj. in the sentence.
It is exactly same as english.
But, when There is a Object.
It changes greatly.
The Adj. in a complete sentence goes to the closest noun to the left.
Which means, when there is a Object in the sentence, The adj. only goes to the Object.
It is odd on how it is works, but weither there are Object and Adj. or not, the verb only goes to the Subject. Even it is placed after Object.
And another different in the grammar...
When there are Subject, Object, Verb, and Adj. in the sentence
There must be a comma after Adj. before any other information is given in the sentence.
Anyone interested?
So those may or may not be post.
Somewhat i can talk about right now is the grammar and rules about the language.
I'm not really good at making this writing formal, sorry.
Anyway.
The grammar about this language is,
When use for a name or something alike:
Adj. + Noun + (Other)
As simple as it is, or similar to any other languages. What makes it different is in this languages is that Adj. usually placed in a different position.
A regular complete sentence will be in follow order.
Subject + *Object + Verb + *Adj. + (Other/extra)
If take the Object out, says that there is no obj. in the sentence.
It is exactly same as english.
But, when There is a Object.
It changes greatly.
The Adj. in a complete sentence goes to the closest noun to the left.
Which means, when there is a Object in the sentence, The adj. only goes to the Object.
It is odd on how it is works, but weither there are Object and Adj. or not, the verb only goes to the Subject. Even it is placed after Object.
And another different in the grammar...
When there are Subject, Object, Verb, and Adj. in the sentence
There must be a comma after Adj. before any other information is given in the sentence.
Anyone interested?
FA+

It was a language base on Japanese. So it may turns out to be even harder to understand if you play the English version.
The language was made base on the 50 basic characters in Japanese. They changed the order, and make it to nonsense.
If I'd make example by using English, what they did was basicly like
Change:
I like sushi.
To:
R Kabh ieiga.
Change "I" to "R"
"I" to "A" etc.
They only changed the letters. So if you change the letters back, it will make sense. And only make sense in the correct language, which is Japanese in that case.
Change:
I like sushi.
To:
R krbh ieigr.
There are three "I"'s
I to R
S to i
just re-order the whole alphabet and replace them in the sentence.
Melkav darr odru diram amea!=means "I hope your language turns out well!" in my language.
I intent to make the grammar structure easy, so there may not be too many rules beyond what I just posted in this journal.
Still a few, maybe, if I can figure just what specific rules I may really need...
I will explain more about the rules next journal, maybe I should start writing it now?
Thanks.