Enhe

Classification and Dialects
Enhe is an elvish language, to be used in future stories by a friend of mine.

Vowels
ø, æ and y only occur in umlauts.

Phonotactics & allophony
a syllable may be up to (c)(c)v(c)(c), though also (c)s(c) and (c)f syllables are legal to occur, in this case c is any consonant, v is any vowel, s is any of the approximants or trills and f is a fricative or sibilant. any unvoiced consonant followed by a voiced consonant becomes voiced.

any consonant occuring twice (or more) in a row will become geminiated

vowels occuring twice (or more) will become long

a hiatus occurs inbetween vowels that are not diphthongs or glides.

h is not pronounced inbetween two consonants

p becomes p ɸ at the beginning or ending of a word and inbetween vowels, the same applies to t, where it becomes t θ

all fricatives and sibilants but /ð/ become unvoiced at the end of a word.

Writing System
with these soundchanges any thing in the enhe latin orthography can be converted into it's ipa equivalent http://pastebin.com/pWZ5369X this is done by using this in the SCA2

Umlauts
For forming an umlauted stem of any stem these rules can be applied to the orthography (not phonology) in SCA2 http://pastebin.com/Cs5RttVf

Indefinite
Especially in the Definite form, if an article could be placed, it is not needed. Often the article is omited, only when needed to fix something contextal the article is added to show definiteness.

Nouns
Nouns decline to number and case, a noun ending on a vowel has slightly different suffixes than a noun ending on a consonant. If the case is red, the stem of the word not only gets a suffix, but also the last vowel of the stem gets umlauted.

Adjectives
Adjectives agree to the noun they describe in case and number, these suffix come after the stem+nin(or alike) An adjective always has nin after the stem in a vocabulary list or a dictionary. This nin indicates a positive adjective, though not being part of the stem, the suffixes which agree to the noun come after this part.

The nin can be replaced with nain to form a negative adjective or nar for an inclusive adjective, which implies something is (adjective) but also can contain other varieties of the same property.

The nin can also be replaced by nol to form a comparative adjective or nuron to form a superlative adjective.

personal pronouns
The personal pronoun acts like a regular noun while declining to a case. The only exception of the regularity is the plural form, where the regular plural n is the last n of every personal pronoun in the plural column.