Pangea Ultima
zheewa
a novel by joe sweeney
A Division of JS Blume Enterprises™
Image based on future Pangea, "Pangea Proxima" by C. R. Scotese, PALEOMAP Project, www.scotese.com
Used with permission
Table of Contents
Introduction

The People
Physiology
Procreation
The Language
Sounds
Alphabet
Grammar
Dictionary
Phrases
Resource
Counting
The Culture
Society
Philosophy
Education
Technology
Calendar
The Environment
Planet
Sean Eagan
Background
Timeline
Grammar

The basic structure of a sentence is:
[Q][[D]A]O[T]V[Q][[D]A]S♦

A Adjective
D Degree (more, best, somewhat, etc.)
O Object
Q Quantity
S Subject
T Tense and/or Time (clock or duration)
V Verb
End of sentence
[] Indicates optional parts to the sentence
The rules for writing a sentence are:
  • First sentence in a conversation contains at least Object-Verb-Subject.
  • Subsequent sentences in a conversation contain only the part that changed:
    • Object-Verb: Talking directly to someone (subject known)
    • Object: New object with same verb and subject
    • Subject: New subject with same object and verb
    • Verb-Subject: Talking about something in particular (object known)
    • Verb: Action changes (subject and object known)
  • Double vowels are pronounced with a long sound.
  • Single vowels are pronounced with a short sound.
  • There are no adverbs, pronouns, plurals or gender.
  • Capital letters are not used.
 
Do you have a tale to tell?