Nauspayr: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
(tagged and stubbed.)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Note: this article contains IPA and Cherokee
{{stub}}
 
<center>'''Note: this article contains IPA and Cherokee'''</center>
 
'''Nauspayr''' (Nauspék or ᏁᏗᏚᎵᏬᏦ) /nɔ'spɛːkǝ̆/ is the native language of a formerly tribal people of a large expanse of low hills in a Cascadian Maritime Climate. Since imperial colonisation these people fell into the lowest social castes and, since the Civil War following devolution of power, make up a large percentage of the resulting diaspora.


==Under Conlang Construction==
==Under Conlang Construction==
Line 9: Line 13:


[http://conlang.wikia.com/wiki/Cacicienne]
[http://conlang.wikia.com/wiki/Cacicienne]
=Preamble=
Nauspayr (Nauspék or ᏁᏗᏚᎵᏬᏦ) /nɔ'spɛːkǝ̆/ is the native language of a formerly tribal people of a large expanse of low hills in a Cascadian Maritime Climate. Since imperial colonisation these people fell into the lowest social castes and, since the Civil War following devolution of power, make up a large percentage of the resulting diaspora.


=Phonology=
=Phonology=
Line 22: Line 22:


===Core Vowels===
===Core Vowels===
[[Category: Conlangs]]
[[Category: A posteriori conlangs]]
[[Category: Amerindian conlangs]]

Latest revision as of 07:38, 26 October 2011

This article is a stub. If you can contribute to its content, feel free to do so.
Note: this article contains IPA and Cherokee

Nauspayr (Nauspék or ᏁᏗᏚᎵᏬᏦ) /nɔ'spɛːkǝ̆/ is the native language of a formerly tribal people of a large expanse of low hills in a Cascadian Maritime Climate. Since imperial colonisation these people fell into the lowest social castes and, since the Civil War following devolution of power, make up a large percentage of the resulting diaspora.

Under Conlang Construction

For the moment, you might want to look at the stand-in page

[1]

and maybe even...

[2]

Phonology

Note that the descriptive phonology (that is, not the IPA phonology), unless otherwise stated, assumes an RP-English pronunciation (just because everyone knows what one of those sounds like). This description is very approximate and assumes minimal linguistic knowledge.
Note: for the purposes of this grammar, the Latin form will be used.

Vowels

There are fifteen simple vowel sounds, divided into "core", "brief" and "extended". Each Latin grapheme takes one of each of these sounds, each denoted by an acute accent for "extended", a grave accent for "brief" and no accent for "core". There are also six "complex" vowels, each having a Latin digraph.

Core Vowels