Loŋgo language translator

This is just a made up language, with the orthography below:
Alphabet: Aa - Ʌʌ - Bb - Cc - Dd - Ðð - Əə - Ee - Ff - Gg - Ɣɣ - Hh - Ii - Jj - Kk - Xx - Ll - Mm - Nn - Ṅṅ - Ŋŋ - Oo - Õõ - Pp - Rr - Ss - Tt - Þþ - Uu - Ũũ - Vv - Yy - Zz The 'Q' is a rare, seperate letter that can only occur in loanwords or proper names.
IPA:
a = [a] ũ = [y ~ ʏ] ʌ = [ɐ] v = [ꞵ] / […ꞵ˕] b = [b] y = [ɨ ~ ɨ̞] c = [ɕ] z = [z] / […ð̱˕] d = [d] ï = [◌ʲ] ð = [ð] / […ð̞] ü = […◌ʷ] ə = [ə] e = [e̞] cl = [ʎ̝̊] f = [ɸ] dj = [d͡ʑ] g = [ɡ] djl = [ɟ͡ʎ̝] ɣ = [ɣ] / […ɰ] dl = [d͡ɮ] h = [ʔ] jl = [ʎ̝] i = [i ~ ɪ] / [j] tc = [t͡ɕ] j = [ʑ] / […ʑ̞] tcl = [c͡ʎ̥˔] k = [k] tl = [t͡ɬ] x = [x]
l = [l]
m = [m] n = [n] ṅ = [ɲ] ŋ = [ŋ] o = [o̞] õ = [ø̞] p = [p] r = [ɾ] / […ɾ̥] s = [s] t = [t] þ = [θ] u = [u] / [w]
Long vowels have an acute accent (this is also possible on the l, m, n, and ŋ): á ʌ́ ə́ é í ó ṍ ú ṹ ý + ĺ ḿ ń ŋ́
The 'u' and the 'i' can sometimes occur as a consonant. In English this would sound like a 'w...' and a 'y...', respectively. So by example: the word "uem" is pronounced as 'wem'. But if the 'u' or 'i' is pronounced as a vowel as well, then there are diaeresis ( ¨ ) on the next letter. Like in the word "uä" (meaning 'monkey'), is pronounced 'oo-ah', in stead of 'wah'. If the diaeresis are in fact on the 'i' or the 'u', then they are pronounced as consonants (in exclusions): kimü (meaning seedling) is pronounced as 'kimw'.

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