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This paper formalizes the structural principles underlying Adagana as a system of disciplined sound production and neuro-vibrational regulation. Unlike symbolic or aesthetic approaches to vocal expression, Adagana is presented as an operational framework in which phonation, breath control, and resonance placement are treated as measurable regulatory mechanisms affecting nervous system stability and cognitive coherence. The manuscript outlines the structural requirements necessary for effective Adagana practice, including breath governance, phonetic discipline, and resonance calibration within the human vocal tract. It further examines operational implications of structured vibration, proposes observable indicators of physiological and cognitive alignment, and identifies common failure modes that arise when vibrational systems are practiced without structural discipline. The paper also introduces a preliminary vowel-based phoneme codex as a foundational layer for the developing Adagana sound architecture. Rather than positioning Adagana as a derivative of existing linguistic or therapeutic systems, this work establishes it as an independent indigenous doctrine of structured vibration. Finally, applied domains are explored, including therapeutic regulation, cognitive stabilization, and cultural restoration through disciplined sound practice. The manuscript concludes by framing Adagana not as metaphor or spiritual symbolism, but as a reproducible vibrational architecture rooted in breath, structure, and embodied phonetic control.