Parseltongue: Difference between revisions
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===Consonants=== | ===Consonants=== | ||
Being a language spoken by snakes and the like, Parseltongue, while having the complete basic plosive repertoire (p/b | Being a language spoken by snakes and the like, Parseltongue, while having the complete basic plosive repertoire ({{IPA|[p]/[b] [t]/[d], [k]/[g]}}), is rich in sibilants and other fricatives, which occur at a far higher frequency. Plosives also assimilate frequently to neighbouring fricatives or sonorants. | ||
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When followed by a {{IPA|[h]}}, whether or not separated by a vowel or diphthong, plosives are aspirated, eliding the {{IPA|[h]}}, and in some progressive dialects fricativise. | When followed by a {{IPA|[h]}}, whether or not separated by a vowel or diphthong, plosives are aspirated, eliding the {{IPA|[h]}}, and in some progressive dialects fricativise. | ||
*E.g. {{IPA|[t]}} + {{IPA|[h]}} = {{IPA|[ | *E.g. {{IPA|[t]}} + {{IPA|[h]}} = {{IPA|[tʰ]}} or {{IPA|[θ]}} | ||
The velar plosives exhibit a slightly irregular pattern of fricativisation, and examples as illustrated below have been noted: | The velar plosives exhibit a slightly irregular pattern of fricativisation, and examples as illustrated below have been noted: |
Revision as of 06:47, 24 February 2006
Parseltongue-inspired | |
---|---|
Pronounced: | n.a. |
Timeline and Universe: | Harry Potter world |
Species: | Ophidic (snakes and snake-likes) |
Spoken: | All over the HP world |
Total speakers: | unknown |
Writing system: | n.a. |
Genealogy: | Isolate |
Typology | |
Morphological type: | Inflecting |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | Accusative |
Basic word order: | SOV |
Credits | |
Creator: | Eugene Oh |
Created: | July 2005 |
Parseltongue is a fictional language spoken by snakes in the Harry Potter series of novels (author: J. K. Rowling), whose known human speakers include the Lord Voldemort and Harry Potter. This language has, however, not been publicly described by Rowling and has no known form.
The Parseltongue referred to below in this article refers to Parseltongue-inspired, a hypothetical form of the abovementioned snake-speak. Because the tongue has no written form, the text samples appearing hereafter are in romanised form.
Phonology
Consonants
Being a language spoken by snakes and the like, Parseltongue, while having the complete basic plosive repertoire ([p]/[b] [t]/[d], [k]/[g]), is rich in sibilants and other fricatives, which occur at a far higher frequency. Plosives also assimilate frequently to neighbouring fricatives or sonorants.
Consonants | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bilabial | Labiodental | Alveolar | Post-alv. | Velar | Glottal | |||||||
Nasal | m | n | ||||||||||
Plosive | p | b | t | d | k | g | ||||||
Fricative | f | v | s | ʃ | h | |||||||
Affricate | ts | dz | tʃ | |||||||||
Approximants | ʍ | w | ||||||||||
Trill | r | |||||||||||
Lateral Approximant | l |
Assimilation
Due to the inherent tendency of snakes (and hence their human inheritors of Parsetongue) to fricativise sounds, plosives commonly assimilate to neighbouring continuants (including aspirate stops), even across word boundaries, except where plosives are geminate. Regressive assimilation is the most common, and changes of the following types have been observed:
- [p] + fricative = labialised fricative (e.g. pf = fw)
- [b] + fricative = [v] + voiced fricative (e.g. bth = vð)
- Occasionally, complete assimilation occurs, e.g. vð becomes ðð.
- [t] + fricative = geminate fricative
- [d] + fricative = geminate voice fricative
- [k] + fricative = [x] + fricative = geminate fricative in certain cases
When followed by a [h], whether or not separated by a vowel or diphthong, plosives are aspirated, eliding the [h], and in some progressive dialects fricativise.
- E.g. [t] + [h] = [tʰ] or [θ]
The velar plosives exhibit a slightly irregular pattern of fricativisation, and examples as illustrated below have been noted:
- [k/k] (i.e. across word boundaries) = [χ]
- [g] is frequently elided
With sonorants, devoicing frequently occurs before a fricative:
- [m] + [h] = devoiced m
- [r] + [h] = devoiced r or [hr]
- [l] + [h] = devoiced l or [hl]
- [l] + fricative sometimes causes the [l] to vocalise to an [u]
Frequently, intervocalic [h] is elided.
- See also [[{{{1}}}]] for more information
Vowels
Parseltongue vowels have phonemic length, but the distinction is not usually made as speakers generally lengthen and shorten vowels at will, or elide them; only the former process is substantially common, however. Occasionally, when two identical vowels occur consecutively (which happens only when they are across a word boundary or when an intermediate consonant, usually [h], has been elided), the resulting sound may be four times as long as normally due to such arbitrary lengthening.
Monophthongs
Vowels | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Front | Near-front | Central | Back | |||||
High | i | ɯ | u | |||||
High-mid | e | o | ||||||
Low | a |
The above table shows the phonemic vowels in Parseltongue. Among them, [e] and [o] have allophones of [ɛ] and [ɔ] respectively.
Diphthongs
Historically, Parseltongue had four diphthongs, [ai], [ei], [ao] and [au]. In modern times, only [ai] has remained unchanged over the years, while [ei] has become [e:], [au] has become [o:] and [ao] has taken the place of [au].
Diphthongs, like monophthongs, can also be lengthened, albeit in their case only for the first component vowel. For example, when [ai] is so lengthened, the resulting sound combination (no longer a diphthong, but two separate syllables) is [a:.i].
Orthography
Parseltongue, having no native script, is romanised with English consonants and Italian vowels. There is one extra letter, <æ>, adopted from the Icelandic alphabet, to represent the diphthong [ai], but only where it denotes the first person genitive case (e.g. arsi, sister; arsiæ, my sister), the first-person verb ending (-æ), or the third-person masculine one (-æs).
Vowels that cannot be reduced or elided are marked with an acute accent ( ́), while stress is normally unmarked. In the rare cases where a vowel is prohibited from arbitrary lengthening, a caron (an inverted circumflex) is used to mark the vowel.
The full alphabet of 22 letters used to romanise Parseltongue is as follows (sounds in IPA):
Letter | Sound | Letter | Sound | Digraph | Sound |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aa | a | Mm | m | Ai | ai |
Ææ | ai | Nn | m | Ao | au |
Bb | b | Oo | o | Au | o: |
Dd | d | Pp | p | Br2 | bɯr |
Ee | e | Rr | r | Ch | tʃ |
Ff | f | Ss | s | Ei | e: |
Gg | g | Tt | t | Hw | ʍ |
Hh | h | Uu | u | Sh | ʃ |
Ii | i | Vv | v | Ts | ts |
Kk | k | Ww | w | ||
Ll | l | Yy1 | ɯ |
1
If, when [ɯ] elides in everyday speech, the preceding plosive is immediately followed by a fricative, assimilation takes place. When voiced plosives are followed by [h], they are aspirated, e.g. dy hí "and who-ACC" [dɯhi] > [dhi] > [dʰi].
2
Historic [r̩] unpacked itself to become [ɯr]. When followed by a vowel, [ɯ] elides and the digraph becomes the consonant cluster [br].