Aloxians

Aloxians - one of the sapient species that inhabit the Galaxy in the Nano Battlers universe. They are the indigenous people of the planet Aloxia. Biology Similar to humans, but with very different skin colors. They are covered with characteristic "lumps" which are actually glands that emit fragrances for communication. The nose is flat, practically limited to the nostrils only. Language


 * A characteristic feature of Aloxians is that they speak broken Spanish, where you can see the following regularities:
 * some nouns are combined with verbs and adjectives with an incompatible gender, but matching their gender in Spanish (this applies mainly to the neuter gender, because in Spanish - and probably in all other Romance languages ​​- it simply does not exist) - eg "milk" in Spanish is female (la leche), so they don't call milk "it", only "she";
 * [ʧ̑] is pronounced softer, turning into [ʨ̑]; - [b] is spoken instead of [v] (eg instead of "vow" it is "bow");
 * instead of "z" there is [θ] (this applies mainly to the inhabitants of the eastern hemisphere of Aloxia - the inhabitants of the western hemisphere pronounce rather "z" like [s]);
 * verbs in the infinitive have Spanish endings, i.e. “-ar”, “-er” or “-ir”, depending on the ending of its Spanish counterpart: eg instead of “write” there is “writir” (from Spanish “escribir”), instead of “protect” - “protecter” (from “proteger”), instead of “trust” - “trustar” (from “confiar”);
 * imperative, vocative, exclamations or polite phrases (and other examples of phatic functions, such as farewells and greetings) are fully translated into Spanish (e.g. not "mister", but "señor", not "to me", but "a mi ", not" talk! ", but" habla! ");
 * double pronunciation of [r] at the beginning of a word (so they can't just say "ring" as [ɹɪŋ], they have to say [ɹɹɪŋ]);
 * instead of conjugation by cases, appropriate Spanish prepositions are used in conjunction with the nominative (eg "de + nominative" instead of the genitive);
 * they use Spanish articles instead of the English one;
 * fully translates into Spanish random words (especially at the end of a sentence).