El Kadsreian English

El Kadsreian English (EkE; en-EK) is a set of varieties of the English language native to El Kadsre. Although the English language has no official status in the Constitution of El Kadsre, El Kadsreian English is one of three of country's national and de facto official language as it is most spoken language of the country with Japanese being the second.

El Kadsreian English contains major elements of both British and American English.

It’s also the official English language used in most El Kadsreian Islands nations, since Narthernee and Raland have their own versions of the English language

Differences between El Kadsreian English and other variants of language

 * "The" tends to be used more than "A" and/or "An" at times.
 * "difficult" tends to be used more than "hard" as the adverb.
 * The word "migrate" is spelled and pronounced as "miagrate"
 * Words that begin with "wo" (i.e. "would") are sometimes spelled with an 'h' before the 'o'.
 * "rice crackers" are referred as "disco crackers" or "discos"
 * Like New Zealander English, "flip flops" are referred as "jandals"
 * "Esky" is referred as "Kori box"
 * "Draught" is spelt "draight"
 * The abdomen is most commonly referred to as the "midriff" when talking about it from the outside, while from the inside, El Kadsreians most commonly refer to it as the "stomach" despite how the stomach is only part of the abdomen inside; other words like "belly" and "tummy" (the former of which sometimes refers to wide/bulging abdomens; the latter of which is used most commonly by young children, as well as older people talking to young children) aren't uncommon, either. (Certain people could be offended by having their abdomen be called a "belly" (suggesting that they are overweight) or a "tummy" (several people don't like being talked to like they are young children, particularly older children (somewhere around 8-12) who'd rather have their abdomen be called other words))
 * Typically when saying “Ice Cream”, they put the stress on “Ice” ala American English. (Several El Kadsreians are used to pronouncing compound nouns with emphasis on the first syllable, and they feel somewhat uncomfortable with pronouncing it “Ice CREAM” ala British English rather than “ICE Cream”)
 * The yield road signs both use “give way” and “yield” terminologies. For example, while the yield sign uses “give way”, the yield sign ahead reads “prepare to yield” to make space for the first row in the red box while the second line is reserved for a Japanese translation.