Naeso/Phonology: Difference between revisions

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=Phonology of Naeso=
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==Syllable Structure==  
==Syllable Structure==  
''Status: Completed / In the works''
 
(C)V(N)
(C)V(N)


C is a consonant or affricate
* C is a consonant or affricate
V is a vowel
* V is a vowel
N is a nasal or liquid
* N is a nasal or liquid


==Affricates==  
==Affricates==  
''Status: Completed / In the works''


These are the possible affricates:
These are the possible affricates:
/ts, dz, , , bv, pf/
 
/ts dz dʒ tθ bv pf/


==Consonants==  
==Consonants==  
''Status: Completed / In the works''


* Stops: /p b t d k g/
* Stops: /p b t d k g/
Line 23: Line 25:
* Liquids: /l/
* Liquids: /l/


==Vowels==  
==Vowels==
''Status: Completed / In the works''


Our vowels are /i, u, a, y, e/ and /o/.
Our vowels are /i u a y e/ and /o/.


All vowels are pronounced separately.  E.g., "Naeso" is syllabized as /na.'e.so/.
All vowels are pronounced separately.  E.g., “Naeso” is syllabized as /na.ˈe.so/.


One vowel cluster is allowed in a single root word or affix, and any combination of two of Naeso's vowels forms a valid cluster.
One vowel cluster is allowed in a single root word or affix, and any combination of two of Naeso's vowels forms a valid cluster.


===Does "any combination of two of Naeso's vowels" mean two different vowels, or also two instances of the same vowel?===  
===Does "any combination of two of Naeso's vowels" mean two different vowels, or also two instances of the same vowel?===  
1. Two different vowels; sequences like "aa" are disallowed in roots and are broken by liason/simplified (see vote below) if they are formed at morpheme boundaries. - 3/0 - (JH,RJ,FH/0)
2. Doubled vowels are allowed: sequences like "aa" are pronounced /a.a/ as two syllables. - 0/2 - (0/JH,RJ)
3. Doubled vowels are allowed: sequences like "aa" are pronounced /a:/ as a long vowel. - 0/3 - (0/JH,RJ,FH)


<span style="font-size: 14px; line-height: 21px;"> The restriction on vowel clusters applies only to roots. </span>
Two different vowels; sequences like "aa" are disallowed in roots and are broken by liason/simplified (see vote below) if they are formed at morpheme boundaries
 
'''The restriction on vowel clusters applies only to roots.'''


I.e., when two or more clusters occur in a compound or derived word, that's OK; they don't get simplified.
I.e., when two or more clusters occur in a compound or derived word, that's OK; they don't get simplified.


===If a compound or derived word would have a sequence of three or four vowels (if e.g. the first element ends in a vowel cluster and the second element begins with a vowel or vowel cluster), how is this sequence dealt with?===
===Liaison===
Liason: insert a consonant after the first or second vowel of a three-vowel sequence or after the second vowel of a four-vowel sequence. (4/0) (JH,FH,BF,RJ/0)
 
a. The liason consonant should be /t/. 0/1 (0/FH) -- (I think we should use a consonant that isn't already in use. ~FH)
If a compound or derived word would have a sequence of three or four vowels (if e.g. the first element ends in a vowel cluster and the second element begins with a vowel or vowel cluster), insert a consonant after the first or second vowel of a three-vowel sequence or after the second vowel of a four-vowel sequence. The liason consonant is glottal stop /ʔ/, transliterated as an apostrophe but not written in the syllabary.
b. The liason consonant should be glottal stop /ʔ/. 3/0 - (JH,RJ,FH/0)


{{Naeso}}
{{Naeso}}

Latest revision as of 03:09, 19 March 2013

Public Domain This page has been released into the public domain. Important note: When you edit this page, you agree to release your contribution into the public domain. If you don't want this or can't do this because of license restrictions, please don't edit.Public Domain


Syllable Structure

(C)V(N)

  • C is a consonant or affricate
  • V is a vowel
  • N is a nasal or liquid

Affricates

These are the possible affricates:

/ts dz dʒ tθ bv pf/

Consonants

  • Stops: /p b t d k g/
  • Nasals: /m~ɱ n ŋ/
  • Fricatives: /f v θ s z ʒ/
  • Liquids: /l/

Vowels

Our vowels are /i u a y e/ and /o/.

All vowels are pronounced separately. E.g., “Naeso” is syllabized as /na.ˈe.so/.

One vowel cluster is allowed in a single root word or affix, and any combination of two of Naeso's vowels forms a valid cluster.

Does "any combination of two of Naeso's vowels" mean two different vowels, or also two instances of the same vowel?

Two different vowels; sequences like "aa" are disallowed in roots and are broken by liason/simplified (see vote below) if they are formed at morpheme boundaries

The restriction on vowel clusters applies only to roots.

I.e., when two or more clusters occur in a compound or derived word, that's OK; they don't get simplified.

Liaison

If a compound or derived word would have a sequence of three or four vowels (if e.g. the first element ends in a vowel cluster and the second element begins with a vowel or vowel cluster), insert a consonant after the first or second vowel of a three-vowel sequence or after the second vowel of a four-vowel sequence. The liason consonant is glottal stop /ʔ/, transliterated as an apostrophe but not written in the syllabary.

Naeso
General:VotingMember listAn Introduction to Naeso
Phonology and orthography:PhonologyStressOrthographyTransliteration
Grammar:GrammarSuffixesPrepositions
Lexicon and corpus:Naeso-EnglishEnglish-NaesoProposed wordsSwadeshNamesCorpus of SentencesMath
Conlang relay torches:LCC4 Relay
This page is part of the project Naeso. We meet up to discuss changes in 'real time' in #naeso on Freenode.