NewLang/Phonology
From Allocosm
Phonology Inventory
Consonants
Stops
Rom. | IPA |
---|---|
b | /b/ |
p | /p/ |
d | /d/ |
t | /t/ |
g | /g/ |
k | /k/ |
' | /ʔ/ |
Affricates
Rom. | IPA |
---|---|
dz | /d͡z/ |
ts | /t͡s/ |
Fricatives
Rom. | IPA |
---|---|
v | /v/ |
f | /f/ |
z | /z/ |
s | /s/ |
lz | /ɮ/ |
lh | /ɬ/ |
zh | /ʒ/ |
sh | /ʃ/ |
x | /x/ |
Nasals
Rom. | IPA |
---|---|
m | /m/ |
n | /n/ |
Liquid/Tap
Rom. | IPA |
---|---|
l | /l/ |
r | /ɾ/ |
Vowels
Monophthongs
Rom. | IPA |
---|---|
i | /i/ |
u | /u/ |
e | /e/ |
o | /o/ |
a | /ɑ/ |
' | /ə/ |
Long Vowels
There are three vowels for which length can be phonemic.
Rom. | IPA |
---|---|
ii | /i:/ |
uu | /u:/ |
aa | /ɑ:/ |
Diphthongs
Rom. | IPA |
---|---|
ya | /ja/ |
ay | /aɪ/ |
wa | /wa/ |
au | /aʊ/ |
Phonotactics
Syllable Shape
Syllables are (C)V(C).
Syllable Weight
Syllables can either be light or heavy.
(C)V syllables are:
- ...light when V is a monopthong of medium length.
- ...heavy when V is a long vowel or a diphthong.
(C)VC syllables are:
- ...light if the nucleus is ' .
- ...heavy otherwise.
Consonant Rules
Consonant Clusters
- Consonant clusters only occur word-medial.
- In morphological operations, if consonant clusters are created of different voice quality, the second consonant takes on the voice of the first.
Vowel Rules
- Vowel hiatus is not allowed between identical monophthong vowels - ' is inserted. Word-medially this is written. Across word boundaries, the sound is often inserted, but never written.
- In terms of vowel hiatus, a diphthong adjacent by a monophthong that is identical to the closest sound of the diphthong counts as an identical vowel for the previous rule. For example: a followed by ai will have a ' inserted between them: a'ai. So would the sequence of ya and a: ya'a.
- ' as a vowel never appears in a stressed syllable.
Misc. Rules
- ' only appears in the following environments and is pronounced differently depending on its location/:
- word-medially, between two consonants (as a syllable nucleus), it is pronounced as the vowel [ə])
- between two vowels, as an onset, it is pronounced [ʔ]
- word-initial as an onset, followed by a vowel, it is pronounced [ʔ]
Prosody
Stress
Stress is lexical, and does not shift due to morphological operations. Ed. note: this feature may change as the conlang is developed.
Prosodic Foot
The primary prosodic foot is an trochee, that is, a heavy syllable followed by a light one. This has implications for word shapes:
- In multisyllable words that are derived, inflected, and/or compounded, the word will end in a complete prosodic foot. Morphological operations will include adapting elements that ensure the shape.
- Words that are bare stems (unaffixed, uncompounded, etc.) can end in any type of syllable.
Orthography Notes
The orthography is mostly just a simple phonemic romanization. There are a few variations.
- I use digraphs for a few phonemes for aesthetic only
- The same for the use of the apostrophe for both the schwa and glottal stop - I like how that looks on the page better.