You know I'm da finwal bwoss? And im goin to wlick your face off for dat.- Molly NEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA! DIS IS DWA MOWWY LANGUAGGGGGGGE AND IT BE DA MOSTHT AMATHIN THING YOU EVER THEE and duh it is bwought to you by mwee!. 1. Phonetics & Word Shapes All words start with N. Core sounds: nea, naa, noo, ne, nu, nai, nyea. Word endings can vary: -a, -e, -i, -o, -u. Repetition is meaningful: doubling a syllable intensifies meaning. Examples: Nea – basic pronoun “I/me” Naa – basic pronoun “you” Noo – object marker / “thing” Nyea – question particle Nuuna – verb “to run” Neena – verb “to eat” 2. Grammar Rules Word Order SVO (Subject-Verb-Object), like English. Optional tense markers embedded in verbs by repeating a syllable: Past: double first syllable → Nuuna (run) → Nuunuuna (ran) Future: add -oo ending → Nuunaoo (will run) Negation Prefix Na- before a word → negates. NaNuuna → “do not run” Questions Add Nyea at the start → yes/no question Nyea Nea Nuuna Noo? → “Did I run to the thing?” Plurals Repeat the object noun: Noo Noo → “things” Or add -ee ending → Nooee ----------------------------------- 3. Sample Vocabulary ------------------------------------ Nea I/me pronoun --------------- Naa You pronoun --------------- Noo Thing noun ------------- Nuuna Run verb --------------------- Neena Eat verb -------------------- Nuu Big adjective ----------------- Naaee Small adjective ---------------- Nyea Question particle interrogative -------------------- Na- Negation prefix “not” ------------------ Naa-naa Happy emotion ------------------ Nea-ne Sad Emotion Neeuunoo - Bad ------------------------- Neeuunaa - good ------------------------ 4. Sample Sentences 1. Nea Nuuna Noo. I ran to the things. 2. Nea Nuunuuna Noo Noo. You will eat the big thing. 3. Naa Neena Nuu Noo oo. → can be simplified as Naa Neena Nuu Nooo. Did I run? 4. Nyea Nea Nuuna Noo? I am not happy. Nea Na-Naa-naa. 5. Sentence Building Tips Always start words with N. Use repetition of a noun for plural. Prefix Na- for negation. Emotions can be standalone words at sentence end: Nea Nuuna Noo Naa-naa. → “I run to the thing happily.” full “Nea-language" Is rather full so you can write stories and sentences in it. Nea Me-I Nehuu Human / person Nataa Toy singular toy (kept the same, easy) Nisaa Food clear pronunciation, long ‘aa’ for clarity Nisee Water short and crisp, easy to say Noree Home / house kept the same, easy to distinguish Noroa Outside / outdoors Nii Animal / pet singular, short Niiiii Animals / pets plural, extended vowel for emphasis Naaaz Friend singular, stretched final vowel for clarity NEX Danger / threat final ‘h’ gives extra emphasis when spoken 8. Examples Using Adjusted Words not totally accurate The human eats the food. Nehuu Neena Nisaa. I play with the toy. Nea Nuuna Nataa. Humans are outside. Nehuuu Nuuna Noroa. Are the toys in danger? Nyea Nataaaa nex? I am friends with the human. Nea Naaaz Nehuu. Pronunciation Notes Long vowels: aa / ee / oo / uu → hold slightly longer when speaking. Triple vowels: indicate emphasis. Final ‘h’ → adds dramatic stress (good for danger or urgent situations). All words still start with N, keeping the Nea-language identity intact. With Y after N pronounce a Neeya sound
(Sammy) Don't take this too seriously guys. When Molly says nea she usually doesn't mean this. Like pretty much never. and she also has a Story she will be coming out with soon. (Molly) DON'T SPOIL ANYDING SAMMY!!!!!!!! (Sammy) Props to anybody who made it to the end of the video.