Kostish

General information
Evonisk (Eng. Evanish) is a West-Germanic language, related especially to Old English, but also Dutch, English, and German, with some borrowings from North-Germanic languages. The idea behind it is that it might have been a hypothetical language to develop from Old English if some of the Anglo-Saxons had traveled to an island more northward and thus had their language more influenced by North-Germanic rather than Latin and French influences(and I must say, it is much more clear than Modern English). At the moment, Evanish is being carefully constructed, along with prefixes and suffixes to be used in compound words that are in place of Romance words. Many things may still change, and I make edits and additions to this page about once a day, but as it develops more, the updates might become less frequent.

Phonology
There is a simple alphabet, and I won't waste time like many others in explaining the phonetics

Alphabet
It's a modified Latin alphabet with 31 characters, including: æ, ð, è, ȝ, ò, þ, ù, and ƿ: If a ȝ(yogh) comes at the end of the word, it is silent.
 * A, Æ, B, C, D, Ð, E, È, F, G, Ȝ, H, I, J, K, L, M, N O, Ò, P, R, S, T, Þ, U, Ù, V, Ƿ, Y, Z
 * a, æ, b, c, d, ð, e, è, f, g, ȝ, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, o, ò, p, r, s, t, þ, u, ù, v, ƿ, y, z

Evanish - English letter comparisons
The names of the letters in Evonisk use the sounds shown to the right of them to sound them out.

Sentence Structures
^The punctuation is what the sentence ends with only, all sentences begin with a capital(if not writing in the Elder Futhark).

^^An imperative sentence is O-V with the understood subject of 2nd person singular, but may be S-O-V if specified with 2nd person plural or singular.

Noun Declension
see Evonisk nouns for more details, nouns may change, since Old English, two genders melded into one, and weak and strong verbs have mixed together. Nouns which follow prepositions are used in the dative case.

Articles & Demonstratives
Articles in Evanish come before all nouns except proper nouns and pronouns, the articles gender agrees with its noun.

Ðæt is the demonstrative "that" and Ðis is the demonstrative of "this", if they are used as adjectives, they have adjective declension, if used as nound, they've noun declension.

Conjunctions
Subordinating conjunctions aren't decided yet.

Negation
When negating a verb "ne" is added before the verb, that is all. Double negatives mean a positive as in saying "I did not see nobody" would be "I saw someone".

Verb Conjugation
Verbs in Evanish are highly inflectional. There is no simple present, one always uses progressive present, so instead of saying "I like..." or "I think..." it sounds like "I'm liking" or "I'm thinking", but the distinction isn't really noticed in Evanish. For understanding the grammar behind it, see the Evonisk verbs page.

Here's an example of the English verb "to slay"... English has lost much of its morphology, Evanish hasn't... This is also one of the English words with more morphology than the usual as well...

Describing Words
All describing words and phrases come before what they describe, which might sound strange in English.

Adjectives
They generally end in -isc(pronounced as English "-ish"). Adjectives are never written post-positively. In this example "foreign" modifies the word "man". Later, adjectives will be declined for gender. Predicative Adjectives are used with the verb "beon" meaning "to be". An example: "The man will be foreign " would be written "Se mannu ƿerð beeth walisc ". For comparative and superlative, see above. Note that there are two different future tenses for different purposes, and it is not wise to use this as a model for each.

Adverbs
They generally end in -lyk. The grammar is the same as adjectives.

Never post-positively
Adjectives and Adverbs cannot be written post-positively, that is, they never follow nouns. An example of post-positive in English would be "tell me something interesting " would have to be written in Evanish as "tell to me an interesting something", note that an article (an) is used, articles must follow every noun and pronouns with the exception of names(and infinitives).

Pronouns
To understand these more clearly, see Evonisk nouns.

F

 * fyr- of or pertaining to fire [from OE "fyr"]

G

 * ga- together/with (cognate with syn) [CG]

I

 * -isc (pronounced as amer. eng. "ish")added to the end of nouns to form adjectives to mean "ways of or similar to".
 * -iȝ added to mean "full of or characterized by" [CG]
 * -isk is the older form from which isc derives added now only to the end of languages (e. g. Evon isk )

L

 * -lyk added to the end of words generally to form adverbs cognate "Eng -ly"[from Old. Fris. "-lik"]

M

 * -man added to verb stems to form workers of the task [from Ger "mann"]
 * mund- of or pertaining to the mind [CG]

U

 * ur- proto [from Ger "ur"]

Noun Stems
list here

G

 * Galyk - similar [from Ga + liek]

Ƿ

 * Ƿalisc - foreign

Verb List
list here ======