Kostish

General information
'''This project has recently been picked up again, I am reworking it to represent the correct information. '''It is a language spoken by desert tribes in the fictional continent of Beln, in the south-western country so called Defon.

Alphabet
The dental fricatives are represented with orthographically as labio-dental plosives with an h (a digraph)

Vowels
the official pronunciation of vowels is maintained as so:

Adverbs
They generally end in -lic. Use the equivalent of "more" and "most" (mora & most respectively) to denote comparative and superlative degrees. The comparative grammar applies here as well.

Determiners
This is probably the hardest of all declensions. Sometimes it is more inflected do to multiple roots for one word. This, however, is the standard declension.

Of those mentioned or implied
Because both of these are regular and for the sake of space, I won't provide declension tables sorry. These come from the three germanic stems: t-, s-, and w-, + "like". *The usage of such is somewhat different. It is used without the indefinite article, as in "which pen", the answer is "such pen", not "such a pen".
 * alc /æl tʃ/ - each
 * silc /sɪltʃ/ - such*
 * ƕilc /ʍ ɪltʃ / - which

Articles
All articles are irregular. There is no negative definite article. One simply negates the verbs and uses the definite article.

The Proto-Germanic s-stem forms completely took over masculine and feminine genders. Every form of both PGmc s-stem and t-stem forms are represented however(suprisingly).

Both indefinite articles feature odd plural forms.

Demonstratives
The distal demonst distal is "yon"

Noun declension
====can be omitted in informal writing by placing an asterisk at the end of the noun(which explains the unique look), and relying on determiner declension. These come from a mixed declension of Middle Gastish. Weak and some strong declension, as well as gender(in noun declension) collapsed; this created case breaking between nominative and accusative.==== 



Demonstrative Pronouns


 Use noun declension with the demonstrative determiner adjectives to form these.

Relative
ðe (from Old English "þe"), The clause comes before the noun it modifies, after the determiner. This word is completely uninflected.

Word Order
This is a basic standard for word order, but it is not very necessary because words are declined for case. Basically everything that describes something else comes before that something else.

Verbs
The conjugation is similar to that of Dutch, English, and German.

Negation The particle "nict" is added after the verb.

==Dictionary==Mark that OE - Old English, Ger - German, Du - Dutch, ON - Old Norse.

great-grandparents
the prefixes far- and mor- are used to identify multiple generations in this case.

Affixes
Some morphmemes. not including inflections

Prepositions
prepositions tend to have only one single meaning and cannot be easily translated therefore from Modern English.

The preposition count is at 31:

Example text
...     