Engelish

Angelish or Judeo-English (אנגעליש) ֵor (גיודיש אנגעליש) is a west germanic spoken con-language originating from Medieval England. It is a direct descendant of the Anglo-Saxon/Old English Language, which the Modern English Language also comes from. It is closely related to Modern British English, Scots, and to a degree Yiddish.

Do to it developing along side Modern English, Angelish maintains a very similar structure to english with pronunciation almost Identical to Scots, however unlike Modern English, Angelish managed to maintain many pre-Norman germanic features, phonemes, and inflections that did not survive into Modern English. Angelish Vocabulary is almost completely germanically based with a handful of Hebrew, Yiddish, and Aramaic loanwords.

It is named after the Angles or Anglo-Saxons who were germanic tribes that migrated to the British isles long ago

In many Jewish communities the Hebrew writing system was adapted for local languages, eventually separating into Jewish languages like Yiddish (from German), Ladino (from Spanish), or Judeo-Arabic. In the case of England, though, the entire Jewish community was expelled in 1290 by King Edward I, so a unique Jewish-English Language did not have the time to form. This Conlang is an attempt to rectify that wrong.

Classification and Dialects
Indo-European Dialects
 * Germanic
 * West Germanic
 * Anglo-Frisian
 * Anglic
 * Angelish

there are four main dialects of Angelish
 * Lindonish (London Area)
 * Nortish (Northern Dialect)
 * Gemrish (Southwestern Dialect [Gemri from Welsh "Cymru" Wales])
 * Yokshirish (Yorkshire Area)

Nouns
Nouns have 3 grammatical genders: Masculine, Feminine, and Neuter. However Neuter and Masculine have almost completely merged in modern speech. Furthermore, Nouns are declined by Case (Nominative, Accusative, and Dative). Genitive case has completely merged together and is indicated by the suffix -es (similar to English '' 's). The Strong and Weak'' classes have merged together, and are no longer differentiated. Examples  engel (m) "Angel", Ship (n) "Ship", "Sun" (f) "Sun"

Verbs
Angelish verbs follow a singular main conjugation pattern similar to german. The pattern follows the weak class of verbs which merged together with the strong class. Verbs are conjugated by Tense, Number, and Person. The future tense, like most germanic languages, is formed through compounding "wellan" (to want) with the infinitive verb (Just like in english).  Present Participle: -inge

Past Participle  ye- _ -ed * if there is a consonant at the end of the verb stem, the consonant is doubled. If there is a vowel at the end, a consonant approximate is placed after (a,e,i - y, o,u - w)

Example: Tikken - "To think"

 Present Participle: Tikkinge

Past Participle  Yetikked To form more complex tenses such as Future, Present Progressive, and others, certain auxilliary (helper) verbs are added, usually with the preterite:

Adjectives
Adjectives are also declined in Engelish, however the dative and accusative cases have been merged, and the Neuter gender conjugations merged with the Masculine. Example: "Gud" (Good)

Definite Articles and Demonstratives
The conjugation of definite article in Angelish has been significantly simplified. The definite article is inflected by Gender, number, and case. However, the Masculine and Neuter Genders merged, and the Accusative and Dative cases merged.

To say "This", the words "This" (sg) and "Thies" (pl) are used. They're used for all cases and genders, and are no longer inflected

Syntax
The Default Word Order is S-V-O (Subject-Verb-Object) like in Modern English. To form a question sentence, the Verb is then placed before the subject, like in German or sometimes English (example: Ert Thou Gud? vs Thou ert gud).

The Do-Verb support does exist in Engelish, most likely directly borrowed from Early Modern English, as texts before the 17th century did not have this. Still today the Do-support construction is considered informal.