Esbnitt

Esbnitt (natively εκς'βνϋτ Eks'bnūt, "this language") is a language spoken natively by about 50000 people on the remote archipelago of Esalit (εκς'ςαλϋτ Eks-salūt, "this group of lands") in the Atlantic Ocean. It is a highly-inflected agglutinative language.

Not many texts exist because this language had no native script and adopted the Greek alphabet. The only texts found were messages to other countries.

Classification and Dialects
It is a highly inflected agglutinative language with nominative-accusative alignment and head initial phrases.

There are no dialects.

In formal use, adjectives are declined like standard nouns, but in casual use the adjective are used in their root forms itself. This wiki's translated texts use the declined adjectives.

It has borrowed many roots from Greek (for example, βιβλις "book")

Phonotactics
This language's word structure is either:

(C)C(V)C

or

C(V)C(C)

All consonant clusters are permissible except for td, k+kh, pb etc, where both the soft and hard forms exist. As is seen in the word structure, no vowel clusters are permissible

Writing System
This language originally was not written; when the Greeks introduced writing to the people the Greek alphabet was used (with alterations). The full script is given below. Please note that:
 * 1) "Th" and "dh" are the alveolar plosives
 * 2) "J" and "c" are post-alveolar affricates
 * 3) "sh" is the retroflex fricative
 * 4) "l" is the alveolar lateral approximant
 * 5) "kh" is the second velar plosive
 * 6) long vowels are represented with a colon ":" instead of the standard IPA symbol
 * 7) the near-back near-close vowel and the first back close vowel are interchangeable.
 * 8) the schwa (mid central)  is represented with "a" and the open back with "a:"
 * 9) Here, diacritics for capital letters are not possible to type, but in writing and actual native printing, the diacritics are always positioned right above the letters.

Grammar
The grammar is highly complicated yet logical.

Nouns
Nouns are declined according to: The genders are: The numbers are singular and plural.
 * 1) Gender
 * 2) Number
 * 3) Case
 * 1) Masculine- used for male humans and male animals
 * 2) Feminine- used for female humans and animals
 * 3) Neuter/Inanimate- used for inanimate things, plants and animals with unknown gender.

The cases are Since all roots (and other words) end with consonants, the suffixes for noun declension are
 * 1) Nominative
 * 2) Accusative
 * 3) Locative
 * 4) Genitive
 * 5) Instrumental
 * 6) Dative
 * 7) Ablative

Verbs
Verbs are conjugated according to person and number The numbers are as usual. The persons are First person (referring to 'I, me'), Second person (referring to "you") and Third person (referring to "he/she/it"). undefined