Modern English logography

27th century English, natively Iŋgliš, is the instance of the spoken English language in the 27th century. It is most widely spoken in the Outer Solar System, with the Inner Solar System retaining many traditional features and vocabulary. Due to it being constantly evolving, it was reclassified from Germanic language to a separate category, Anglic language.

Consonants
Consonants are almost identical to its 21st century counterpart (Received Pronunciation).

Vowels
Vowels were simplified compared to its different accents before the Solar System Colonization. However, they are also similar to their RP counterparts in its perdecessor.

Spelling
The spelling has been reformed to be much more phonemic - most silent letters were deleted and others were given a voice (such as debėt [dɛbɘt] = debt or nâmbė̄ [nʌmbɜː]).

Alphabet order
A, Â, B, D, Ð, E, Ė, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, Ŋ, O, P, R, S, Š, T, U, V, W, Z, Ž, Þ, ◌̄

Grammar
The grammar is extremely easy and less irregular than its older counterpart. Some historically "regular irregularities" were preserved and applied to non-irregular words of the same structure.

Verbs
Verbs have usually only 2 forms - one is used for the present, the other is used for the past. The past tense is created simply by adding -t to the end of a verb. If a verb already ends in -t or in -d, a suffix -it is added (example: hīt > hītit, constrasts with hit). There is also a suffix -iŋ which, as the current English -ing, is used to indicate continuous tenses.

Bi and hav
As one may have predicted, bi and hav are the equivalents of be and have, common auxiliary verbs. Their past tense was unchanged (except in spelling) for rather historical reasons - the past tense of bi is wos or wė̄, depending on the person, and the past tense of hav is had (same as 21st century English). Bi is often used as in sentences like "It bi rīl ðo", sentences indicating the state of an object. It is also commonly used together with present continuous.

Du
Du is the equivalent of do, and is now used as an auxiliar much rarer. "Do not" has transformed into a post-verban "not" - as such "Do not throw waste on the grass" is translated as "Jīt not šits on wīd", literally "Throw not wasteon grass". Questions now have a separate question particle used at the end of a sentence and separated by a comma - ðatrait, shortened to "rait". Du is one of the few verbs to retain an irregular past tense, which is dân, coming from the past participle form.

Nouns
Nouns are only declined according to number. Just like in older English, -s is added to a noun to form plural forms. If a word ends in one of the following - -s, -z, -š (inclusing tš) or dž, a suffix -is is added. Unlike its older versions, a word ending in -ou or -o does not acquire an additional infix "e" befor the suffix.

Etymologically, many nouns perserved their older form, with many more appearing while time was passing. Many expressions and interjections originated from nouns.

Adjectives
Adjectives have almost not changed, if spelling isn't accounted. Mō, les, most, līst are still used for comparative and superlative forms respectively. To create a QUALITY-OF noun, one adds - ās after the adjective: Example: smāt ās. The word ejef has the meaning of "very" and is post-adjectival.

Possessives
Possessives share the same form as their correspondent pronouns.

Determinatives
Determinatives are ðis, ðīz, ðat and ðōz. -z indicates plural determinatives.

Articles
27th century English has the same articles as its older counterparts, however they can (and often are) omitted, especially in quick talking. They are most commonly used at the start of a sentence.

Interrogatives
Interrogative words are wât, witš, wen, wē, wum, wai and hau.

Lexicon
As the Human civilization has evolved, so has the English language. Words were added to the language specifically for objects that appeared in the Human race with time.

Slangs and expressions were adapted to the language, such as the word for throw being "jīt" and a word for friend being "hōmi".