ROMANIZATION OF TONE
Low ˩ <a>
High ˥ <á>
Rising ˩˥ <ǎ>
Falling ˥˩ <à>
Creaky ˥ˀ <ã>
Creaky falling ˥ˀ˧ <ȧ> (I guess I'll have to use ı for normal /i/. That's fine, though; I like that letter.)
Low falling ˧˩ <â>
NOUN CLASS
Old English's noun classes no longer have any relevance in Ẹlnk. The original pronouns *hē *hēo *hit (masculine, feminine, neuter) would have become Ẹlnk é êo ĩ, but ĩ was lost entirely, and êo is reserved for female humans, and even then é is often used for female children. In addition, é is often reduced to simply e.
NOUN CASE
The noun cases of Old English were also lost, except on pronouns; however, the genitive forms of many nouns were lexicalized, e.g. wǎtr "water" versus watr "wet" (orig. "of water").
NOUN NUMBER
You know the drill ─ the inflected plural of Old English was also lost, except on pronouns. It was replaced by nı (< *maniġ "many"), which could precede a noun to add a plural meaning, e.g. nı lǎun "traitors." This was only used on indefinite nouns; see below.
ARTICLES
Old English's definite article had a vast number of forms, varying by case, noun class, and number. Most of these forms were lost in Ẹlnk, but it retains two: se, the singular, and a, the plural. The plural particle nı should also be considered an article, since in Ẹlnk it is used only on indefinite nouns. Thus one might have wẹrn (< *wer-mann "man-person") "a man," nı wẹrn "some men," se wẹrn "the man," a wẹrn "the men."
There is also an article hâ that may also be used to make a gnomic generalization. It comes from the same source as a, but was not reduced.
PRONOUNS
Ẹlnk's pronouns retain different forms for different numbers and cases. These are shown in the table below.
Code: Select all
NOM ACC DAT GEN
1sg ǐ me mın
1du wǐ ǔng ngẹ́r
1pl we u ur
2sg (h)ù re (h)ìn
2pl ye ǐng eor
3sg e/é ín ì
3sf êo ì ír ír
3pl ì ì ím êor
Due to the similarity in form and function between eor and êor, many speakers/dialects merge the two, as either one.
The singular second person pronouns ù re ìn are informal; in a formal context, one replaces them with the plural pronouns ye ǐng eor, and replaces the plural pronouns with the third person plural pronouns ì ì ím êor.