Arusian Phonotactics in a Nutshell
The Arusian language is restrictive concerning syllable structure, as it only allows a fixed set of syllables to be used in building new words.
Arusian syllables in general never end with /e/, /ow/ or /i/; they never begin with a vowel (even if they do seem to begin with a vowel, there is a glottal stop there); and they can end with /f/, /m/, /p/, /d/, /s/, /ʃ/, /z/, /ʒ/, /g/ and with /t/ and /k/ (which can alternate with /ʔ/ in faster or lazy speech). The following syllables are impossible in Arusian: bi, be, be, big, mig, vi, si, se, etc.