Fenrir's sprake

Alphabet
A, Ai, B, Bh, C, Ch, D, Þ, E, Ee Ei, F, G, Gh, H, I, Ie, Ij, J, K, L, Ll, M, N, O, Oo, P, Ph, R, Rh, S, T, Th, U, Ui, W, Y

Phonotactics

Gender
There are four genders:

Abstract

This gender is used for things that are ideas and thoughts etc. they aren't holdable or touchable, like the idea of a nice garden, or love, or hate.

Existing

As the name says... this gender is most commonly used for nouns that identify existing, holdable and touchable things. Things you can smell, hear, taste, feel or see, like a beautiful garden. This also means that the idea of a garden, which is abstract, changes into existing as soon as you build it, though when your thinking of the garden it will be abstract.

Living

As the name says... words with this gender revolve around living things like animals, humans, plants etc.

Not living

Unfortunately all things die sooner or later, this gender is used for words that revolve around, or identify things that don't live anymore, for example a dead plant, or a piece of meat on your plate.

Articles
There are three types of articles: Definite and Indefinite articles. Articles conjugate according to gender, case, definiteness (definite, indefinite) and number(single, dual and plural).

And
And is used to describe that things are combined or belong with eachother somehow, for example This and that in which This" goes together with that. However, this particle changes according to the gender of the things it combines, so if it's used for combining something that's living and something which is abstract it will be different than for example combining Not living and existing. Even the order of the genders influences the way in which and  is conjugated:


 * Genderless is used for, as the name says, things without a gender, like numbers.