Yunge

Yugebusorese is a language spoken in the Yuge Island.

Consonant taxonomy

 * /ᵐb ⁿd ᵑɡ/ surface as [m n ŋ] next to /ʊ̃ ɔ̃/.
 * /j ɡ̊/ surface as [d͡ʑ ɟ̊] respectively, before /i/.
 * /ᵗs d̥ˢ/ surface as [ɕ ʑ] respectively, before /i/.

All vowels can be either short, medial or long and are always long when they are stressed in the final position of a word. Most vowel sequences are present, due to Ansang and other languages contact more vowel sequences were introducted to the language, the presence of [ɨ ɯ ə] in Ansang are loaned as ŸĬ, ŸŬ and ĔĬ.

Orthography
Written Yugebusorese has it's own alphabet, the Ansang alphabet, whoever for easy typing it features a non-canon latin alphabet for better comprehension of the language.
 * A, Ā, Ă, B, C, D, E, Ē, Ĕ, G, H, I, Ī, Ĭ, K, M, N, Ŋ, O, Ō, Ŏ, P, R, T, U, Ū, Ŭ, W

Syllable structure
Differently from Ansang, Yugebusorese is a completely CV (consonant-vowel) or V (vowel), lacking any kind of consonant clusters like Ansang does.

Reduplication
Reduplication of noun and verbs in Yugebusorese is as important as it is in Ansang, featuring similar functions, but some are innovative and fossilized from Common-Ansangic, reduplication of first syllable of nouns to form the meaning "made out of X/ I'm (strong/healthy) like X", for example:
 * moŋo (rock, stone)
 * momoŋo (Made out of stone/ I'm strong like stone)
 * ukuno (flower)
 * ukukuno (Made out of flowers/ I'm (delicate/beautiful) like flowers)

Loanwords
Yugebusorese incorporates a number of loanwords in which constructions such as consonant clusters or word-final consonants occur, though they do not occur naturally in the language. To solve this issue, words that are CVC generally gain a epenthetic short vowel of similar nature of near by vowels, for example:


 * e.g.: ayah (Ansang loanword) → ayahă (sheet of paper)
 * e.g.: héws (Old-Qachkav loandword) → hēwĕsĕ (snake)

Demonstrative Determiners
They indicate not only degrees of distance of the

Deitic Locationals
Deitic Locationals act just like adverbs of location.

Pronouns
Pronouns are usually marked for number.

Noun case
Noun case in Yugebusorese is quite weird and essentially different from Ansang, it is discussed those are noun declesions of another language, a paleo-ansangic language, it is taught this language is somewhat similar to Upic languages.

Questions
Yes/No questions usually receive the question particle cālē that is a shortening of the phrase cāga yo lē "yes or no?".

In other questions it is allowed to use another question particle cuku, whoever this particle is becoming unproductive with time.

Possetion
Yugebusorese language in 900 AGS lost it's possessive pronouns, lacking any kind of possession system, it was innovated by just adding the remaining particle cī, for example: mu cī ulusu yo ŋote ulusu

1SG POS house and 2PL.DU house

'my house, and your(dual) house'

Subjunctive and Irrealis-non-future
Subjunctive expresses wishes and desires while the irrealis-non-future is used for conditions just like "would have rather than" or "if only" just like the frustrative mood.b-emumo-aze dalăda-pu

1SG-sleep-NFUT.IRR awake-STAT

'I would have rather sleep than stay awake'

Unaccusative verbs
They work pretty much as the traditional Intransitive whose grammatical subject is not a semantic agent. In other words, it does not actively initiate, or is not actively responsible for, the action of the verb. Verbs like this can be achived adding certain suffixes, for example:
 * Ayoni (eat)
 * Ayoni-lo (want to eat)

These verbs can also be considered adjectives, meaning Ayonilo (wanted to be eaten). Unaccusative because although the subject has the semantic role of a patient, it is not assigned accusative case.

Aspects auxiliaries that trigger irrealis morphology
co-t-ae-[e]ye

TERM-3SG-arrive-NFUT.REAL

'He/she/it has arrived already.'