Eadwald's Guideth to Speakingst Liketh Rouxls Kaard
Beginningst note: I usually doth not applyeth these to names of peopleth or places, ande for types of animals usually doth not (lion wouldst not be written as "lioneth") but this one art flexible dependingeth on what thou art feelingeth.
If a worde ends in "ic" thou can addeth a "k" (panic = panick), but I usually avoideth addingst a "k" if it either haf another "c" (arctic, cryptic), endeth in a consanant or most other "[vowel] c" wordes (againe excludingeth "i") though there art definitely exceptionseth. If in doubt I recommendeth prioritizingeth readability, though there art certainlyeth cases where it couldst worketh. There art always exceptionseth.
If a worde endeth in "[vowel] y", "[consonant] d", "w", or "m", I maye addeth an "e" at the endeth. (may = maye, hand = hande, word =worde, worm = worme).
If the worde endeth in "[consonant] y", "w", "t", "k", or "ed" thou can addeth "eth" to the endeth (silly = sillyeth, allow = alloweth, accept = accepteth, work = worketh, played = playedeth).
If a worde endeth in "ing" or "d" thou can addeth "st" to the endeth (working = workingst, ahead = aheadst)
Thy/Thine, Thee, Thou, ande Ye
Okaye I usually followeth the rules for these more consistentlyeth but again, it always matters lesseth when writingst liketh Rouxls Kaard. I wilt still explaineth the basick differences usingeth an experpt from this web blogge pageth:
Thou = you when the subject (“Thou liketh writing.”)
Thee = you when the object (“Writing liketh thee.”)
Thy = your possessive form of you. (“Thy blade well serves thee.”)
Thine = your possessive form of you, typically used before a noun. (“Thine writing smacks of mastery.” or, “The writing is thine.” — thy own can be used in place of thine to similar effect)
Ye = you all | all of you used when referring to a group of people (“Ye fools!”)
(I recommendeth lookingst at the link for more informationeth on medieval pronouns)
have = haf or haveth (doth not usually mattereth which)
are (ande sometimes is) = art (that is = that art)
Less commoneth but still applicableth:
myself = myselfeth or mineself
Part of mine judgement relies on if it "soundeth right" (usingeth them correctly doth not matter to Rouxls ande shouldst not matter to thou), but maye refraineth or adjusteth if the sentence soundeth too weirdeth.
All of mine listedeth tips art subjectiveth ande open to changingeth arounde. Always considereth the sentence contexteth because an alterationeth that worketh in one sentence maye throw offeth another. Haf fun and be thyself.