Cernelian/Phonetics and orthography: Difference between revisions
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== Consonants == | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! rowspan="2" | | ! rowspan="2" | | ||
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! rowspan="2" | Alveo-palatal | ! rowspan="2" | Alveo-palatal | ||
! colspan="2" | Velar | ! colspan="2" | Velar | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Plain | ! Plain | ||
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| {{IPA|/ɲ/}} | | {{IPA|/ɲ/}} | ||
| {{IPA|/ŋ/}} | | {{IPA|/ŋ/}} | ||
| | | | ||
|- | |- | ||
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| {{IPA|/k ɡ/}} | | {{IPA|/k ɡ/}} | ||
| {{IPA|/kʲ ɡʲ/}} | | {{IPA|/kʲ ɡʲ/}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Affricate | ! Affricate | ||
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| {{IPA|/t͡ʂ d͡ʐ/}} | | {{IPA|/t͡ʂ d͡ʐ/}} | ||
| {{IPA|/t͡ɕ d͡ʑ/}} | | {{IPA|/t͡ɕ d͡ʑ/}} | ||
| | | | ||
| | | | ||
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| {{IPA|/x/}} | | {{IPA|/x/}} | ||
| {{IPA|/xʲ/}} | | {{IPA|/xʲ/}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Tap | ! Tap | ||
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| | | | ||
| {{IPA|/ɾ/}} | | {{IPA|/ɾ/}} | ||
| | | | ||
| | | | ||
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| {{IPA|/j/}} | | {{IPA|/j/}} | ||
| {{IPA|/w/}} | | {{IPA|/w/}} | ||
| | | | ||
|} | |} | ||
Like Polish, Cernelian exhibits final-obstruent devoicing that causes word-final voiced obstruents become devoiced (prów {{IPA|/pruf/}} "flock"). Obstruents (plosives and fricatives), when voiced are unvoiced before unvoiced obstruents, while when unvoiced become voiced before voiced obstruents ({{IPA|/x/}} has the voiced allophone {{IPA|[ɣ]}}). | Like Polish, Cernelian exhibits final-obstruent devoicing that causes word-final voiced obstruents become devoiced (prów {{IPA|/pruf/}} "flock"). Obstruents (plosives and fricatives), when voiced are unvoiced before unvoiced obstruents, while when unvoiced become voiced before voiced obstruents ({{IPA|/x/}} has the voiced allophone {{IPA|[ɣ]}}). | ||
Cernelian | === Consonant structure === | ||
The maximal consonant structure in Cernelian is ''CCVCC'' (C = consonants, V = vowels). | |||
== Vowels == | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! colspan="2" | | ! colspan="2" | | ||
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The nasal vowels become {{IPA|/ɛn, ɔn/}} before plosives and affricates, {{IPA|/ɛm, ɔm/}} before labials, {{IPA|/ɛŋ, ɔŋ/}} before post-alveolars and velars, {{IPA|/ɛɲ, ɔɲ/}} before alveo-palatals, and {{IPA|/ɛ, ɔ/}} before ''l'' or ''ł'' and word-finally in the case of ''ę''. | The nasal vowels become {{IPA|/ɛn, ɔn/}} before plosives and affricates, {{IPA|/ɛm, ɔm/}} before labials, {{IPA|/ɛŋ, ɔŋ/}} before post-alveolars and velars, {{IPA|/ɛɲ, ɔɲ/}} before alveo-palatals, and {{IPA|/ɛ, ɔ/}} before ''l'' or ''ł'' and word-finally in the case of ''ę''. | ||
== Consonant gradation == | |||
Like Finnish and Estonian, consonant gradation (involving lenition, Cernelian: ''sona'', lit. "voicing", or ''lenicja'') are frequent in Cernelian. However, it is not possible to predict the ending whose affected by gradation (weak grade), due to syllable structure changes. This is the gradation table: | Like Finnish and Estonian, consonant gradation (involving lenition, Cernelian: ''sona'', lit. "voicing", or ''lenicja'') are frequent in Cernelian. However, it is not possible to predict the ending whose affected by gradation (weak grade), due to syllable structure changes. This is the gradation table: | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
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The endings often affected by weak gradation include: | The endings often affected by weak gradation include: | ||
* Nominative (including accusative and vocative) plurals of regular declensions (''śció'' : ''sio'' "pig, pigs"), and locative, ablative, and instrumental plurals of most declensions (''śció'', ''siaso'' "pig, in the pigs") | * Nominative (including accusative and vocative) plurals of regular declensions (''śció'' : ''sio'' "pig, pigs"), and locative, ablative, and instrumental plurals of most declensions (''śció'', ''siaso'' "pig, in the pigs") | ||
* 1st and 2nd person singular past tenses (''jaka'' : '' | * 1st and 2nd person singular past tenses (''jaka'' : ''jeżę'' "to share, I shared") | ||
* All of the conditional endings | |||
== Stress == | |||
Like Polish, Cernelian words are almost always stressed in penultimate (second-from-last) syllable. However, some conservative eastern and southern dialects influenced by Russian and Ukrainian, have unpredictable stress (''iję̀'' "I grinded" vs. ''ìję'' "of the horsehair"). | Like Polish, Cernelian words are almost always stressed in penultimate (second-from-last) syllable. However, some conservative eastern and southern dialects influenced by Russian and Ukrainian, have unpredictable stress (''iję̀'' "I grinded" vs. ''ìję'' "of the horsehair"). | ||
* Proto-Finnic ''*áivastàdak'' → ''jawos'''tà''''' vs. standard ''ja'''wò'''sta'' "to sneeze" | * Proto-Finnic ''*áivastàdak'' → ''jawos'''tà''''' vs. standard ''ja'''wò'''sta'' "to sneeze" |
Revision as of 19:42, 22 October 2021
Consonants
Labial | Dental | Post-alveolar | Alveo-palatal | Velar | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plain | Palatal | Plain | Palatal | ||||
Nasal | /m/ | /mʲ/ | /n/ | /ɲ/ | /ŋ/ | ||
Plosive | /p b/ | /pʲ bʲ/ | /t d/ | /k ɡ/ | /kʲ ɡʲ/ | ||
Affricate | /t͡s d͡z/ | /t͡ʂ d͡ʐ/ | /t͡ɕ d͡ʑ/ | ||||
Fricative | /f v/ | /fʲ vʲ/ | /s z/ | /ʂ ʐ/ | /ɕ ʑ/ | /x/ | /xʲ/ |
Tap | /ɾ/ | ||||||
Approximant | /l/ | /j/ | /w/ |
Like Polish, Cernelian exhibits final-obstruent devoicing that causes word-final voiced obstruents become devoiced (prów /pruf/ "flock"). Obstruents (plosives and fricatives), when voiced are unvoiced before unvoiced obstruents, while when unvoiced become voiced before voiced obstruents (/x/ has the voiced allophone [ɣ]).
Consonant structure
The maximal consonant structure in Cernelian is CCVCC (C = consonants, V = vowels).
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Close | /i/ | /ɨ/ | /u/ | |
Mid | Plain | /ɛ/ | /ɔ/ | |
Nasal | /ɛ̃/ | /ɔ̃/ | ||
Open | /a/ |
Extreme northern dialects has phonemic vowel length, denoted by acute accent (ác /aːts/ "boat", íłmo "air, sky"). Standard Cernelian have ⟨ó⟩, but only for etymological reasons.
Cernelian reflects limited vowel harmony between the vowels -o- (back) and -e- (front), otherwise the Proto-Finnic vowel harmonies *o : *ö displaced by Cernelian o : e, and *u : *y become Proto-Cernelian yers *ъ and *ь that often deleted in some positions.
The nasal vowels become /ɛn, ɔn/ before plosives and affricates, /ɛm, ɔm/ before labials, /ɛŋ, ɔŋ/ before post-alveolars and velars, /ɛɲ, ɔɲ/ before alveo-palatals, and /ɛ, ɔ/ before l or ł and word-finally in the case of ę.
Consonant gradation
Like Finnish and Estonian, consonant gradation (involving lenition, Cernelian: sona, lit. "voicing", or lenicja) are frequent in Cernelian. However, it is not possible to predict the ending whose affected by gradation (weak grade), due to syllable structure changes. This is the gradation table:
Strong grade (unaffected) |
Weak grade (affected) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Plain | Palatal | Plain | Palatal |
k | cz/c | ∅/g | ż/dz |
t | ć/ci | ∅/d | dź/dzi |
p | p/pi | ∅/w | w/wi |
s/ch | ś/si/sz | ∅ | j/i/∅ |
The weak grades g, d, and w are used after consonants, although due to Slavic metathesis the original weak grades sometimes still exist (*oldak → łodo "to be", not *ła). The nature of palatal weak grade of s varies: j are used intervocalically, i used after the rest of consonants, and ∅ (just succeeding vowels, i → y) only used after consonants c, cz, dż, l, sz, and ż. The exact history of the gradations are:
Proto-Finnic | Proto-Cernelian | Cernelian | |
---|---|---|---|
Early | Late | ||
-kVb- | -k- | ||
-kVf-, -kjV | -k- | -č- | -cz- |
-kVbVf- | -k- | -c- | -c- |
-CgVb- | -CC- | -C- | |
-NgVb- | -g- | ||
-VbgVb- (adjacent vowels) |
-V̄- | -V- | |
-gVf- | -g- | -ž- | -ż- |
-CgVbVf- | -g- | -dz- | -dz- |
-pVb- | -p- | ||
-pVf-, -pVbVf-, -pjV- | -p- | -p- | -p-, -piV- |
-CbVb- | -CC- | -C- | |
-NbVb- | -b- | ||
-VbbVb- (adjacent vowels) |
-V̄- | -V- | |
-bVf-, -CbVbVf- | -w- | -v- | -w-, -wiV- |
The endings often affected by weak gradation include:
- Nominative (including accusative and vocative) plurals of regular declensions (śció : sio "pig, pigs"), and locative, ablative, and instrumental plurals of most declensions (śció, siaso "pig, in the pigs")
- 1st and 2nd person singular past tenses (jaka : jeżę "to share, I shared")
- All of the conditional endings
Stress
Like Polish, Cernelian words are almost always stressed in penultimate (second-from-last) syllable. However, some conservative eastern and southern dialects influenced by Russian and Ukrainian, have unpredictable stress (iję̀ "I grinded" vs. ìję "of the horsehair").
- Proto-Finnic *áivastàdak → jawostà vs. standard jawòsta "to sneeze"
- Proto-Finnic *áutugas → ùto "blessed, wealthy" (same in standard patterns)
Note that Proto-Finnic stress is originally non-phonemic, with secondary stress existed in last non-final odd-numbered syllables.
Orthography
The Cernelian orthography is written in Latin, and definitely same as that of Polish.
Letter | IPA value |
---|---|
⟨A a⟩ | /a/ |
⟨Ą ą⟩ | /ɔ̃/ (see above) |
⟨E e⟩ | /ɛ/ |
⟨Ę ę⟩ | /ɛ̃/ (see above) |
⟨I i⟩ | /(ʲ)i/ (see below) |
⟨O o⟩ | /ɔ/ |
⟨Ó ó⟩ | /u/ |
⟨U u⟩ | |
⟨Y y⟩ | /ɨ/ |
Letter | IPA value | ||
---|---|---|---|
Elsewhere | Before -i- and -iV | ||
Voiced | Unvoiced | ||
⟨B b⟩ | /b/ | /p/ | /bʲ/ |
⟨C c⟩ | /dz/ | /ts/ | /tɕ/ |
⟨Ć ć⟩ | /d͡ʑ/ | /t͡ɕ/ | always as ⟨c⟩ |
⟨D d⟩ | /d/ | /t/ | /d/ |
⟨Dź dź⟩ | /d͡ʑ/ | /t͡ɕ/ | always as ⟨dz⟩ |
⟨F f⟩ | /f/ | /v/ | /fʲ/ |
⟨G g⟩ | /ɡ/ | /k/ | /ɡʲ/ |
⟨H h⟩ | /ɣ/ | /x/ | /xʲ/ |
⟨J j⟩ | /j/ | ||
⟨K k⟩ | /ɡ/ | /k/ | /kʲ/ |
⟨L l⟩ | /l/ | ||
⟨Ł ł⟩ | /w/ | ||
⟨M m⟩ | /m/ | /mʲ/ | |
⟨N n⟩ | /n/ | /ɲ/ | |
⟨Ń ń⟩ | /ɲ/ | Always as ⟨n⟩ | |
⟨P p⟩ | /b/ | /p/ | /pʲ/ |
⟨R r⟩ | /r/ | ||
⟨Rz rz⟩ | /ʐ/ | ||
⟨S s⟩ | /z/ | /s/ | /ɕ/ |
⟨Ś ś⟩ | /ʑ/ | /ɕ/ | Always as ⟨s⟩ |
⟨T t⟩ | /d/ | /t/ | |
⟨W w⟩ | /v/ | /f/ | /vʲ/ |
⟨Z z⟩ | /z/ | /s/ | /ʑ/ |
⟨Ź ź⟩ | /ʑ/ | /ɕ/ | Always as ⟨z⟩ |
-V- in this context are all vowels except ⟨i⟩ and ⟨y⟩. In -iV- sequences, plosives are inserted with preceding /j/ before vowels, but velars not (Stamiesie /staˈmʲjɛɕɛ/ "Cernelia").