Nu Aves generally postpositions the adjective.
"Ineya Razh? Foolish people?"
In this case, "razh" is the adjective and "ineya" is the noun.
Nu Aves makes no distinction of form between both forms of nominal.

The genitive is usually represented by the postposition -en "to"
" Khara-en Ansha - sacred to the hunt"
There is a form which uses personal pronouns to indicate possession, but it is never used for anything besides possession.

Nu Aves is largely agglutinative, and suffixes verbal endings:
eg, fayake.
-ke is the present participle and applies to continuing situations.

The present tense is a combination of the copulative marker -i- at the head of the sentence, either incorporated into the existential marker -ai ie, i'ai or as part of the definite article nu, ie inu (xyz), and the present participle -sya on the verb in the second or final position.
Inu nisya'en raoyitshou kharake
The nisya's male child is hunting.

This illustrates the manner Nu Aves treats the postpositions:
"I'ai vralnei oro'en ma nye'en iri." There is light between you and I.
i'ai kakh oro'en ma nye'en iri. - there's blood between you and me.
i'ai elon oro'en ma ne'en iri. - there's humiliating death between you and me.

Illustrative texts:
Nu Melaimed Venya - The Strongwoman Melaimed
Nu Shelaisha fayake-Venya - Shelaisha the trainee Strongwoman
Nu Kra'Yishela Venya - The Strongwoman Kra'Yishela - Kra' means shape/ly, Yishela means body; Nu Kra'Yishela Venya is strongly suspected of having given herself that name; she is arrogant and has a highly inflated sense of her own worth
Nu Tivenya Venyaya'en ret - the strongest of the Strongwomen
Nu Praleyo Nisya'en Raoyitshou - Praleyo the male offspring of a nisya
Nu Zhalie Khara'en Ansha - the land sacred to the hunt
Nu Ahn Forakh'en Melin - the Claw of the Morning - the Morning Star
Ai! Isao Ineya! Ineya Nyenin! - O, this people, my people!

As can be made out from the samples above, nu aves khara ansha has a habit of embedding head words in a phrase bounded by the definite article and the supplementary adjectival phrase, in the case of Nu Melaimed Venya, Melaimed is the head noun, being a proper noun, while Nu - "the" is balanced by Venya - "Strongwoman" on the other side. Word for word, one would translate it "The Melaimed Strongwoman".

In terms of sentence structure, this should logically mean that a sentence is an appositional set of phrases, a verb phrase followed by a noun phrase or phrases, with the head word immediately following the initial word and the adjectival nominals immediately following - though the word order is looser for the adjectival phrases, and in some instances it appears that the head nominal is a phrase itself - ahn forakh - "morning" - means something like "sun up" ahn - "rise", forakh - "sun", and it takes the 'en dative marker.

I'ai vralnei oro'en ma nye'en iri.
There's light to you and to me between

I'ai nyoro'en nu lalno toie toino
There's to us (Incl) the blood one of one/identical

"I'ai ulye toie'en rai vraite toie nya nu aves khara-ansha."
It is good for one to hear the language of the sacred hunt.

I'ai ulye toie'en rai vraite toie nya nu aves
It's good to one that hear one such the language

khara-ansha.
of the sacred hunt

aninay- kharake
group/pack hunting