>>15883599Cuneiform dialects are odd. It's not too dissimilar to Japanese in a few key ways. Cuneiform symbols represent syllables like Japanese characters, but many dialects often borrow symbols from logographic languages like Sumerian (Akkadians parent language) as shorthand. Kind of like Kanji. Another thing Akkadian does is that it assigns case endings to nouns depending on how they participate in a clause, and the verb is typically the last word in the clause. Verbs are also determined by their roots, three letters around which the sex and tense of the verb is constructed.
>Ex. HZ(M) aḫāzum: (To take:marry) is then converted into iḫuzma (he marries)>šumma awilum(nominative) aššatam(accusative) iḫuzma; la'abum(nominative) iṣṣabazzi; ana šanitim(genitive) ahazim(genitive) panišu ištakan; ihhaz; aššazu(accusative) ša la'abum iṣbatu; ul izzibši; ina bitim(genitive) ipušu ušamma; adi balṭat bitanašiši.>If a man takes a wife;(and) she is seized by illness;(and) he sets his face/mind on a second marriage; he may marry; (but) he shall not divorce his wife that was seized by sickness; she will settle in the house they built (and) he shall take responsibility for her for as long as she livest. an anon who did his dead language reps instead of his Jap reps.