Well, I'm not sure I can help with any of this then.Ahzoh wrote: ↑Sun May 05, 2019 5:19 amBasically, yes. It's the beginning of a triconsonantal root system. That means I need to morphologically level the ablaut patterns and I want them to be leveled to CVCaC for passive voice and CVCuC for active voice. I suppose I could probably just hand-wave the active voice pattern into having the CVCuC pattern since most of them are statistically close to that pattern, but I'm not as sure about the pattern CVCaC for passive voice.
Just -e (masculine) and -a (feminine), they're rather inherent to the language's nouns like Spanish -o/-a are inherent to Spanish nouns. So they're kind of inert as far as grammatically-induced sound changes (like vowel mutation) are concerned.What exactly are the noun gender suffixes? Knowing them might make this easier to answer.
Slightly off-topic, but: if you're making a triconsonantal language, then I highly recommend The Unfolding of Language, by Guy Deutscher; it outlines in excellent detail the evolution of triconsonality. Although aimed at non-linguists, it's still one of the best non-fiction books I've ever read.