The Imhavluk writing system works in syllables. This may seem strange since it is not a syllabary and consists of phonemes and accents. Syllables are formed by an initial consonant underlined with an lcu (lone consonant underscore), mcu (modified/modifiable consonant underscore) or a vowel with no such underlining. Under that is either a vowel, a consonant, or some combination of the two that can be contained within a syllable. If nothing sits under a character, than an underscore is not used. Within a syllable, if the initial character does not make use of a diacritic, the accent assigned to a vowel placed under the character will instead sit at its top, if a diacritic is used, then the accent is placed above its original character and under the original sound. Words are not separated by spaces, and instead, by an up-slash (|).
A lone consonant underscore is used under the first row of consonants depicted in the image above, while the modified/modifiable consonant underscore is used on the second and third row of consonants.
This script was made to be written with a chisel in either ice or stone by the society that uses it.















