Mobelish Information

A list of words in Mobelish, with other information as well.

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A Look at the Alphabet

The Mobelish alphabet has 26 letters just like English, but there is not a 1-to-1 ratio for letters. Let's take a look at the alphabet and find out what sounds every letter makes.

The IPA symbols recently got updated! They're more accurate now wooo!

Ee Bb Dd Pp Kk Tt Ii
[ e ] [ b ] [ d ] [ p ] [ k ] [ t ] [ i ]
e b d p k t ee
ECI - eci BANO - bano DAKI - daki PURO - puro KHGA - khga TIXA - tixa IKA - ika
Ss Zz Oo Nn Mm Yy Hh
[ s ] [ z ] [ o ] [ n ] [ m ] [ ʝ ] [ u ]
s z o n m y oo
SHNI - shni ZADI - zadi OKO - oko NAKI - naki MELO - melo YIPE - yipe HCA - hca
Cc Jj Uu Gg Xx Ff
[ vn ] [ d͡ʒ ] [ ʌ ] [ fd ] [ t͡ʃ ] [ f ]
vn j u fd ch f
CIO - cio JOKE - joke UMPE - umpe GALA - gala XINI - xini FORO - foro
Ww Ll Aa Qq Rr Vv
[ ʃ ] [ l ] [ ɑ ] [ ð ] [ r ] [ v ]
sh l a th r (rolled) v
WAMI - wami LUNA - luna AKRO - akro QHCE - qhce RHWO - rhwo VENE - vene

Mobelish Pronunciations

Each letter in a Mobelish word is pronounced. We don't do any of that nonsense like the word "face." /feɪs/. In Mobelish, if a word was fase it would be pronounced /'fase/. Notice how the vowel at the end is pronounced.

When pronouncing Mobelish words, it's important to know which syllable to stress. If the word has two syllables, stress the first one. If it has three or more, accent the second one.

Mobelish has a few diphtongs as well. A diphthong is a sound formed by a combination of two vowels. An English diphthong example would be the word "lie." The combination of the vowels "i" and "e" create a different sound than just pronouncing them next to each other. Let's take a look at Mobelish diphthongs.

- OH / oh
[ ui ] oo-ee
- YY / yy
[ w ] w

Noun Declension

The language of Mobelish has three genders. The masculine gender, the feminine gender, and the neutral gender. In their normal states, masculine nouns end in -ak, feminine nouns end in -om, and neuter nouns end in -el. All three genders decline differently.

What is declension? Declension is the state of changing a word based on how it's used. The declension of verbs is called conjugation. A good example of declension in English are the words "he", "him", and "his".

In Mobelish, nouns decline based on plurality and for the inclusion of the articles: "a", "an", "some", and "the".

Masculine

Femenine

Neuter

singular -ak -om -el
a/an -akzu -omja -elpe
the -akht -omat -elut
plural -oko -hmi -alo
some -okozu -hmija -alope
the -okoht -hmiat -alout

For example, the word man - qresak - ends in "ak" so it is a masculine noun. To make it definate (the man), replace the "ak" with "akht", making the word "qresakht."

Verb Conjugation

Full Mobelish Conjugation Chart

Noun declension was very simple, however, verb conjugation is not as simple. There are many conjugations, some including conjugated forms of other verbs. Mobelish has ten pronouns:

For explanations, we are going to use the verb "fenzap," meaning to eat. The root of the verb is "fenz", and we are going to replace the -ap with other letters to conjugate. Let's learn to say "I eat". To conjugate the verb, you add -i to the root, creating the word "fenzi." Mobelish is a "pro-drop" language, meaning you can drop the pronoun in certain cases. Since the conjugation is different for each pronoun, you don't need to include it. However, if the subject is not a pronoun, but rather a noun instead, then you CANNOT take it out, like "the cat" or the combination of a noun and pronoun like "Mark and I."

Adjectives and Adverbs

Remember that in Mobelish there are three genders. Adjectives have different forms depending on what gender object they are being used on. The adjective happy, onle, will change based on what gender/number of objects it is describing.

Masculine

Femenine

Neuter

Singlular onla onlo onle
Plural onlok onlhm onlal

The word for man in Mobelish is "qresak." So if you want to say "a happy man," you say "qresakzu onla." Remember that nouns decline, and do note that the adjective comes after the noun. If you want to pluralize it, and say "some happy men," you would say "qresokozu onlok."

Mobelish adverbs are easy as well, and theres no declension needed! Just take the root of an adjective and add -eze to the end. So to say happily, you'd get the root of happy - onl - and add the suffix to create the word onleze. So to eat happily, you'd say "fenzi onleze." Notice again how the adverb is after the word it is affecting.

Common Phrases

If you've just met up with you're friend, you'll most likely say "hi" to them. To say hi in Mobelish, you use the word vai. If you're meeting up with someone and want to say hi to them formally, you would say xelai. This is similar to English's "hello." If you want to ask someone how they are feeling at the moment, you would say "Nula ewek?" Be sure to use the verb fhwap because this has to deal with how the person is feeling. If you used the word jap and said, "Nula ajak?" than you would be asking what a person is like, what their qualities are.

Mobelish Colors

Mobelish colors are pretty simple. They act just as normal adjectives most of the time. To say "the red brick" you would say "phtakht asta." Pretty simple stuff. If you want to use colors like light blue, you combine the color and the word light, so light blue would be "jeme olaqe." aste olaqe translates to "pink" because that's the English word for light red. It's pretty much the same for dark colors as well. Remember that dark orange is brown in English.

When using the light or dark variant of the color, be sure to make both adjectives are in the correct gender and quantity. Dark red bricks would translate to "phtoko astok xiskok."

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