Legendary Creature — Elemental Sorcerer
2/3
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→ Infinite +1/+1 counters on a creature, Infinite ETB, Infinite LTB
→ Infinite ETB, Infinite LTB, Infinite death triggers
→ Each opponent returns all creature cards from their graveyard to their hand, Infinite +1/+1 counters on a creature, Infinite ETB
→ Infinite ETB, Infinite LTB, Infinite creature tokens with haste
→ Each opponent returns all creature cards from their graveyard to their hand, Infinite ETB, Infinite LTB
→ Each opponent returns all creature cards from their graveyard to their hand, Infinite ETB, Infinite LTB
If the copied permanent had in its mana cost, X is 0.
The token created by Ashling's last ability copies exactly what was printed on the original permanent and nothing else (unless that creature was copying something else; see below). It doesn't copy whether that permanent was tapped or untapped, whether it had any counters on it or Auras and Equipment attached to it, or any non-copy effects that changed its power, toughness, types, color, and so on.
If the copied permanent was copying something else, then the token enters as whatever that permanent copied.
Any enters abilities of the copied permanent will trigger when the token enters. Any "as [this permanent] enters" or "[this permanent] enters with" abilities of the copied permanent will also work.
If Ashling leaves the battlefield after you've cast an Elemental permanent spell and paid its evoke cost but before that spell resolves, the permanent that spell becomes will still have evoke when it enters. As such, the triggered ability represented by evoke will still trigger, and when that abiltiy resolves, you'll still have to sacrifice that permanent.
To determine the total cost of a spell, start with the mana cost or alternative cost you're paying (such as an evoke cost), add any cost increases, then apply any cost reductions. The mana value of the spell is determined by only its mana cost, no matter what the total cost to cast that spell was.
If you pay the evoke cost, you can have the creature's own triggered ability or abilities resolve before the evoke triggered ability. You can cast spells after that ability resolves but before you have to sacrifice the creature.