Round Robin Conlang/Observations: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 10:01, 21 December 2009
Thought I'd look at what our phonology looks like so far. --Trɔpʏliʊm • blah
Basic inventory
Consonants
Labial | Coronal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stops / affricates |
Ejective | tsʹ | kʹ | ||||
Voiceless | p | t | ts | k | q | ||
Voiced | b | d | ɡ | ||||
Nasals | m | n | ŋ | ||||
Fricatives | Voiceless | f | s | χ | h | ||
Voiced | v | ||||||
Liquid | l |
Semivowel (?)
/j/
Vowels /i e ɛ a ɔ o u/; /oi/; possibly /ai/ (seriously now, is "they two" [tsoi] or [tsai] ?) For purposes of vowel-harmonic suffixes, /a/ (phonetically open central [ä]?) counts as a back vowel.
Tone High and low. Low is unmarked.
Lenition
The following changes are attested:
Original | p | b | t | n | g | q |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lenited | f | v | s | ð̃ | ɣ | χ |
[ð̃ ɣ] have only been attested under spirant lenition thus far.
I would presume the process to apply regularly also to the "missing" buccal stops / nasals, ie. m, ŋ, d, k → ṽ, ɣ̃, z (ð? l??), x. Whether the other consonants do anything remains to be seen.
Other alternations
Gemination appears to be regular for at least lenitable consonants, with bb, tt, nn, gg, ŋŋ attested. /tsʹ, s/ appears to resist gemination as seen from betsʼaq, ísasaq.
There is also prenasalization (apparently identical with gemination for nasals).
Syllable structure
Thus far (C)V(N)(C) seems sufficient (maximal example: boimb). Only clusters of two consonants have been observed medially, even them limited to geminates and nasal + consonant.
Root structure
Segments appearing in verbal roots might be drawn from a more restricted set than all consonants. No voiceless fricatives aside from /s/, or /ts, l/, appear in any of the verb roots attested so far, and neither do /ɛ, ɔ, o/. AlexFink