Ẹńgaliś Anụ

Classification and Dialects
This is directly related to Modern English. It is through a quote, however, by John McWhorter in his book What Language Is that gave me this idea:


 * It’s a pain for English speakers to have to learn the gender of every noun in French or German along with the noun itself. But in Navajo, for every single verb in the language, you have to learn [the] five variations. You just have to know. The nearest equivalent for an English speaker would be if every verb were like be, where we have to know that it’s I am but I was and I’ve been and, subjunctively, if I were—just imagine if English had it in addition that today I speak, yesterday I spoke, tomorrow I spock, repetitively I spack, and hypothetically I just might spoo.

With this quote, I will create a Navajo-inspired English Conlang.

This language could quite possibly be a dialect of English, if spoken by a group of nomads from northern North America.

Writing System
"~" is a phonetic marker, replacing the silent "-e" at the end of some words in english, but not all; for instance, with the words "plane" and "plan," they would be spelled plan~ and plan, but "hop" and "hope" would be spelled hap and hop, just so there is no mispronunciation of the "e"

Lexicon
Swadesh