Ŝerał grammar notes

Sherall (Ŝerał) is a Germanic tongue whose primary ancestor is Yiddish, spoken by a group of genetically engineered humans with a restricted range of phonemes, and an demophobic, secular outlook on life.

Normal word order is SVO, modifed by the fact that the verb must always come in the second position. A helping verb moves other verbs to the end of the sentence in infinitive form with ge- added to the front.

Pronouns:

ix, ŋir: first person, singular and plural
ðu, ir: second person, singular and plural
sie, łie: third person, singular and plural
žie, žien: third person lover, singular and dual (us)
es: third person object

Articles:

Case: R, S, Ŝ
Nom: ðar, ðas, ðaŝ
Dat: ðer, ðes, ðeŝ
Acc: ðir, ðis, ðiŝ
Gen: ðär, ðäs, ðäŝ
Nouns in the genitive also get a 's at the end.

Verb conjugation (regular/to be/to have)

ix: höre/isþe/haslse
ðu: hörsþ/isþ/haslsþ
sie: horþ/isþ/haslþ
žie: hörł/seł/haslł
es: hörþ/seþ/haslþ
ŋir: hören/sein/haslen
ir: höreþ/seiþ/hasleþ
łie: hörel/seil/haslel
žien: hörłeł/isłeł/haslłeł
Time markers: A time marker only needs to be used when the time can not be inferred from context. In conversation, present tense is generally assumed to be default; in literature, the first sentence usually includes a tense marker, and most following tenses are inferred from that. Tense changes in subclauses are relative to the base tense for the sentence.