Svalbardian: Difference between revisions

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The non-labial nasal is [ŋ] before [g] and [n] elsewhere,
The non-labial nasal is [ŋ] before [g] and [n] elsewhere,
===Vowels===
The Svalbardian language has three vowels, /a i u/.
===Transcription===
The transcription system used here is partly phonetic, distinguishing allophones.
{|class="wikitable"
|-
!  
! Labial
! Alveolar
! Velar
|-
! Voiceless stops
| p
| t
| k
|-
! Voiced stops
| b
| d
| g
|-
! Fricatives
| f
| s
| x
|-
! Glides
| w
| r
| g
|-
! Nasals
| m
| n
| n
|-
|}
The vowels are straightforwardly spelled '''a i u'''.
===Syllable structure===
The maximal syllable structure is CVC.
===Accent===
Svalbardian has a weak stress accent on the first syllable of the word.


[[Category:Conlangs]]
[[Category:Conlangs]]
[[Category:LLL]]
[[Category:LLL]]

Revision as of 12:02, 2 June 2014

Svalbardian is a fictional language by Jörg Rhiemeier which represents the language of the indigenous people of the Svalbard archipelago in the League of Lost Languages (in reality, Svalbard has no indigenous population). Svalbardian is an isolate; no relatives are known. The language has borrowed a few words from Old Albic (e.g., kiwi 'ship' < Old Albic ciph) and recently from Norwegian (e.g., muru 'snowmobile' < Norw. motor).

So far, only a phonology sketch exists.

Phonology

Consonants

Svalbardian has only five consonant phonemes, though some of these have very broad allophony.

  Labial Alveolar Velar
Oral p~b~ɸ~w t~d~s~r k~g~x~ɣ
Nasal m n~ŋ

Allophony: The oral consonants are realized as

  • voiced stops [b d g] after nasala
  • fricatives [ɸ s x] before oral consonants and word-finally
  • glides [w r ɣ] intervocally
  • voiceless stops [p t k] elsewhere

The non-labial nasal is [ŋ] before [g] and [n] elsewhere,

Vowels

The Svalbardian language has three vowels, /a i u/.

Transcription

The transcription system used here is partly phonetic, distinguishing allophones.

  Labial Alveolar Velar
Voiceless stops p t k
Voiced stops b d g
Fricatives f s x
Glides w r g
Nasals m n n

The vowels are straightforwardly spelled a i u.

Syllable structure

The maximal syllable structure is CVC.

Accent

Svalbardian has a weak stress accent on the first syllable of the word.