This page is an explaination of Avonese, the Krin's native language.
What is Avonese?
Avonese is the written and spoken language in Avo- Invented by the Krin initially by drawing characters on leaves glued to a vine. All Krinkits are expected to learn to write in Avonese- and you'll be able to learn it too!
Here you can see the Avonese Character Guide:
All things written in Avonese are written on a line running from left-to-right, while the words themselves are spelt down-to-up. Punctuation marks are either written directly touching the vine facing upwards, or on the end of the vine if they finish the sentence.
A good rule of thumb: Avonese is always spelt how the word sounds!
You may have noticed the line at the bottom of all the sentences and words written in Avonese. This is called The Vine, and it's a required part of the language that connects words together and tells Krin where the start of the word is.
Non-Vowel Characters include A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, and Z.
You'll notice that Avonese does not have a character for the letter K, and instead replaces all "K" sounds with the letter C.
Vowel Characters include AE, EE, IE, OH, and YU
These vowel sounds have their own characters, and replace their non-vowel counterparts when being written.
Mix Characters include OO, TH, SH, CH, SK, ST, ED, ZED, XE, OW, AW, AE, and AGE.
These characters make unique sounds and are separate from other characters to make it easier for Krin to write words that take up less space.
Punctuation includes ! ? . , and ;
Punctuation like Commas(,) and Semi-Colons(;) are never used to end a sentence in Avonese and are always placed on the side of the vine.
All words are written with each character touching the one below it, with the first character touching the Vine and going upwards like a growing sprout!
Once you are done writing your word, you go back down to the vine in order to start the next word!
Now that you know how to write Words, you can put them together on a longer vine in order to write a sentence!
When you are done with putting all your words together, you use a punctuation mark at the end of the vine to signal the end of the sentence.