p, pʰ t, tʰ, k, kʰ (b, p, d/j, t, g, k/c) f, v, s, z, x, ɣ (f, v, s, z, x, q) m, n, ŋ (m, n, ng) tʃ, dʒ (š, ž) r, l, j (r, l, y)
i, i:, y, ɪ, u, u: (i, ī, ü, ï, u, ū) e, a, o, o: (e, a, o, ō)
The split between the two genders is mainly sex based, but with a particular twist. The two genders are: the Masculine (I gloss it as 'm'), and the Non-Masculine or Common ('c'). The masculine gender is used to indicate male persons or animals, professions, plants, abstract nouns, and augmentatives. The common gender indicates female persons or animals, other inanimate objects, non-finite verbs, places, and diminutives.
There is no dedicated morpheme that specifies number, but in most cases it is shown with the articles. The articles have number baked into them, thus there exists a set of articles encoding two dimensions of definiteness and numbers. art def indef sg kay sam pauc kaba saba pl kaf saf
In the singular only. (art.def.sg = sam = 1)
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