| Feature | Description This page will be further developed mid-2010 | 
| Phonological Features |  | 
| Vowel inventory |  | 
| Vowel harmony | In this field you describe rule based assimilations involving vowels in [your language] | 
| Consonant inventory | In this field you describe the consonants of [your language] | 
| Tone | There appear to be two tones, plus a high-low falling tone on some word-final syllables. | 
| Syllable Structure | Syllable types include CV, V and N.  V and N syllables occur only as grammatical markers. | 
| Morpho-syntactic Features | In the following fields you describe some of the basic morpho-syntactic parameters of [your language] | 
| morphological classification (1) | This is a moderately agglutinative language, with nominal prefixes marking singular and plural | 
| morphological classification (2) | Linguists have distinguished between head- and dependent-marking languages. Semitic languages are head marking languages; it is the head of the noun phrases that needs to have a special form when followed by a dependent noun; in the Germanic languages it is the head of the verb phrase that expresses person-number features of its subject. Grammatical dependencies on the other hand are in some of the Germanic languages expressed on the dependent noun phrases in form of case. [Your language] might be both, head- and dependent-marking, depending on the category of speech and or the type of feature expressed. This is what you can describe in this field. | 
| Nominal Phrases | In the following fields follows a description of some of the basic morpho-syntactic properties of nominal constituents | 
| syntactic structure | In this field you describe the linear order of elements in the noun phrase | 
| nominal modification | In this field you indicate the basic types of nominal modification (adjectives, relative clauses, adpositions...) | 
| nominal specification | In this field you indicate the basic types of specification. Does [your language] have determiners, demonstratives (deixis), numerals, quantifiers. Are there affixes expressing reference, deixis. Are there nouns or other elements expression a portion of a noun that the co-occur with? | 
| possession | In this field you describe how possession is expressed (for example, syntactically or by use of prepositions, through juxtaposition or morphologically) Does [your language] feature possessive pronouns? | 
| pronominal system | In this field you indicate if [your language] has free pronoun forms? Are pronouns marked for their grammatical function (object versus subject pronouns)? Does your language have bound pronouns (affixes) or pronoun doubling? Are reflexives expressed by pronouns? | 
| Verbal Phrases | In the following fields serve for the description of some of the basic morpho-syntactic properties of verbal constituents | 
| word order | In this field you indicate the basic word order of your language (SOV, SOV ...) | 
| TAM | In this field you indicate which tense and/or aspects are morphologically or tonally marked; does [your language] make use of periphrastic tense or aspect constructions? | 
| infinitival forms | In this field you indicate if [your language] makes use of an infinitive marker? How many infinitival forms does your language have? | 
| verbal constructions | In this field you indicate if [your language] has ditransitive constructions, serial verb constructions or complex verb forms composed of several verbs. Does your language have so called light verbs, perhaps only used to indicate a certain tense or aspect? | 
| Adpositions | In this field you indicate if [your language[ makes use of prepositions or postpositions. Does your language have spatial nouns? Does your language use adpositions or particles to indicate grammatical relations between the verb and a nominal argument? | 
| Complementation | In this field you describe complementation strategies. Does [your language] make use of complementizers? | 
| Special Properties of [your language] | This North Guang language is almost if not entirely extinct and has no ISO or Ethnologue number. Information here is based on a short wordlist collected at Kpalangase (Northern Region, Ghana) in 2007. |