Fecharese language

Classical Fecharese (Hecarimisu ) or, simply, Fecharese is a North-Socoan language that originated in the area of the Eye Lakes of the Fecharese Great Lakes region.

Consonants

 * /μ/, /ꝥ/ and /ȸ/ become [n] [p̼] and [b̼] when adjacent to denti-alveolar and velar plosives.
 * Plosives become voiced at the end of syllables.
 * /t͡ɕ/ becomes [ʃ] at the end of a syllable.

Writing system
Classical Fecharese is written using the Fecharese script. It is a featural script, each glyph is made up of four parts, representing the manner of articulation (cuswewer), place of articulation (cusworoño), a modifier (cilowswe) and the vowel (atañegqo). It is written from bottom to top, right across the page.

Number
Classical Fecharese has four numbers: singular, plural, greater plural and collective. Plural nouns are formed using reduplication of syllables of the noun, while collective ones are formed with the postposition -le.

Tense and aspect
In Classical Fecharese, verbs are conjugated for tense and aspect using particles following the verb.

Negation
Negation is marked with -hae.

Syntax
Classical Fecharese is a strongly head-initial language. The main word order is VOS (verb–object–subject). Adjectives come after the noun. Fecharese uses postpositions.