Pure Latin English

Aenglish

Setting
Pure Latin English or natively known as Inglic is a form of English with only latin features. Due to writing, spelling and pronunciation divergence from other latin-derived languages, it adopts different suffixes spellings but retains a strict phonetic pronunciation and preserves from some latin phonemes lost in modern English and French. It also retains altered/simplified form of the Latinate declension and conjugation systems. Vocabulary wise, very distinct from formal English except for foreign phrases (like status quo or senso stricto) and sometimes preserves Latin vocabulary lost in modern English. All in all, it can be said to be parallel to French or Frenglish among Latin languages.

Basic Grammar
Declension (Nouns & Adjectives)

Every substantive can be declined in Latin. Proper nouns like names or unusual foreign nouns like scientific nomenclature can have their inflections delegated to modifiers like articles, adjectives or other nouns within the same noun phrase.

The declension is a set of endings given to substantives based on the case and number. The number is either singular or plural. The cases are nominative, accusative, genitive and dative.

The cases are roles that nouns or noun phrases play in a sentence.

Nominative: As subject or quotation. If a quoted word has a meaning that could be delegated to other cases, it may be delegated to a modifier or freely appended.

Genitive: As possession or related to the word it is appended to. It corresponds to the "-'s" ending in English. It may also be expressed as "d' + (Accusative/Dative)".

Dative: As indirect object, direction, and prepositional case. Every preposition puts a word into the dative case. For indirect object or direction it is always expressed as "at + (Accusative/Dative)".

Accusative: As direct object and less commonly as prepositional case. Here is the table formatted as a Fandom wiki table:

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Contrast to Germanic Hertiage
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