Opsíbdañox

- In 899AGS ships from the Lavondu people are sighted in the horizon, it landed in the island of Yuge, from there, the local king was warned, a group of unknown people came from the sea, no one knew who they were or what language they spoke, to be more surprised they acted with peaceful acts, making native Ansangs believe they don't come with fire but with hands. We provided them with housing and food, food they seem to not know of, they had a weird type of stick they used to scratch in some surface they call it suxbʼa < zujbä. In some years they would review and teach their language, and their script in which we have adapted to write our mother tongue. It work as follows


 * B-SET (back-set) it is a set of consonant + vowel that allows us to write consonant + a back vowel like /o/ and /u/.
 * F-SET (front set) it is a set of consonants + vowel that allows us to write consonant + a front vowel like /i/, /e/, /a/ and /ɨ/.
 * There's no way to mark which vowel follows the consonant, the reader must rely on context and knowledge of Ansang language that shows us that are many different words that are different in essence.
 * Voicing and other features this script cannot differ between voiced and voiceless consonants, but voiced consonants are always prenasal in Ansang so it boils down that is not useful to have such distinction; L/R consonant are both /r/ and /l/, the reader must rely on context; D/TS consonant are both /d/ and /t͡s/, again it rely on context.
 * Vowels they are essential for the language, but the only exception is E/I, they can be both read as /e/ and /i/.
 * The glottal stop and gemination the glottal stop in 600AGS Ansang was essential, up 800AGS it lenited to /∅/ in initial and final syllables, but stayed intervocalically.
 * The consonant Z is to represent /ɲ/ alone and /ᶮɟ/ with the nasal letter before it e.g.:  /ᶮɟo/  /ɲi/.