Inng: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 792: Line 792:
|-
|-
! CCC
! CCC
| <u>C</u>CC<br>[[#c2v_conversion|Vowel to consonant conversion]] || C<u>C</u>C<br>[[#c2v_conversion|Vowel to consonant conversion]] || CC<u>C</u><br>[[#final|Final]]
| <u>C</u>CC<br>[[#conversion|Conversion]] || C<u>C</u>C<br>[[#conversion|Conversion]] || CC<u>C</u><br>[[#final|Final]]
|-
|-
! CCV*
! CCV*
| <u>C</u>CV<br>[[#initial|Initial]] || C<u>C</u>V<br>[[#c2v_conversion|Vowel to consonant conversion]] || CC<u>V</u><br>[[#vowel|Vowel]]
| <u>C</u>CV<br>[[#initial|Initial]] || C<u>C</u>V<br>[[#conversion|Conversion]] || CC<u>V</u><br>[[#vowel|Vowel]]
|-
|-
! CVC
! CVC
Line 804: Line 804:
|-
|-
! VCC
! VCC
| <u>V</u>CC<br>[[#vowel|Vowel]] || V<u>C</u>C<br>[[#c2v_conversion|Vowel to consonant conversion]] || VC<u>C</u><br>[[#final|Final]]
| <u>V</u>CC<br>[[#vowel|Vowel]] || V<u>C</u>C<br>[[#conversion|Conversion]] || VC<u>C</u><br>[[#final|Final]]
|-
|-
! VCV*
! VCV*
| <u>V</u>CV<br>[[#initial|Initial]] || V<u>C</u>V<br>[[#c2v_conversion|Vowel to consonant conversion]] || VC<u>V</u><br>[[#vowel|Vowel]]
| <u>V</u>CV<br>[[#initial|Initial]] || V<u>C</u>V<br>[[#conversion|Conversion]] || VC<u>V</u><br>[[#vowel|Vowel]]
|-
|-
! VVC
! VVC
Line 819: Line 819:


{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|+ <span id=initial>Initials: <u>C</u>V · <u>V</u>VV · <u>V</u>CV · <u>C</u>VV · <u>C</u>VC · <u>C</u>CV</span>
|+ <span id=initial>Initials: <u>C</u>V · <u>C</u>CV · <u>C</u>VC · <u>C</u>VV · <u>V</u>CV · <u>V</u>VV</span>
! English letter
! English letter
| a || b || c || d || e || f || g || h || i || j || k || l || m || n || o || p || q || r || s || t || u || v || w || x || y || z
| a || b || c || d || e || f || g || h || i || j || k || l || m || n || o || p || q || r || s || t || u || v || w || x || y || z
Line 826: Line 826:
| {{IPA|/ts/}} || {{IPA|/p(i)/}} || {{IPA|/k/}} || {{IPA|/ɡ(u)/}} || {{IPA|/ts/}} || {{IPA|/f/}} || {{IPA|/t/}} || {{IPA|/h/}} || {{IPA|/ts/}} || {{IPA|/k(ŋ)/}} || {{IPA|/t(a)/}} || {{IPA|/l/}} || {{IPA|/m/}} || {{IPA|/n/}} || {{IPA|/dz/}} || {{IPA|/p/}} || {{IPA|/ts/}} || {{IPA|/d/}} || {{IPA|/s/}} || {{IPA|/ɡ/}} || {{IPA|/dz/}} || {{IPA|/f(ə)/}} || {{IPA|/b/}} || {{IPA|/dz/}} || {{IPA|/dz/}} || {{IPA|/s(l)/}}
| {{IPA|/ts/}} || {{IPA|/p(i)/}} || {{IPA|/k/}} || {{IPA|/ɡ(u)/}} || {{IPA|/ts/}} || {{IPA|/f/}} || {{IPA|/t/}} || {{IPA|/h/}} || {{IPA|/ts/}} || {{IPA|/k(ŋ)/}} || {{IPA|/t(a)/}} || {{IPA|/l/}} || {{IPA|/m/}} || {{IPA|/n/}} || {{IPA|/dz/}} || {{IPA|/p/}} || {{IPA|/ts/}} || {{IPA|/d/}} || {{IPA|/s/}} || {{IPA|/ɡ/}} || {{IPA|/dz/}} || {{IPA|/f(ə)/}} || {{IPA|/b/}} || {{IPA|/dz/}} || {{IPA|/dz/}} || {{IPA|/s(l)/}}
|}
|}
This conversion table is used when the letter sequence is one of CV, VVV, VCV, CVV, CVC, CCV. The letter in parenthesis is included in CV and CCV sequences, and in CVC sequences unless the final letter is cyphered with two phonemes.
This table is generally used for the first letter in the sequence, if it is a consonant. The letter in parenthesis is included in CV and CCV sequences, and in CVC sequences unless the final letter is substituted with two phonemes.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|+ <span id=vowel>Vowels: <u>V</u> · C<u>V</u> · <u>V</u>C · <u>VV</u> · CC<u>V</u> · C<u>V</u>C · C<u>VV</u> · <u>V</u>CC · VC<u>V</u> · <u>VV</u>C · V<u>VV</u></span>
! English letter
| a || e || i || o || u || y
|-
! Inng phoneme
| {{IPA|/a/}} || {{IPA|/i/}} || {{IPA|/ə/}} || {{IPA|/u/}} || {{IPA|/ŋ/}} || {{IPA|/l/}}
|}
This table is generally used for vowels.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|+ <span id=conversion>Conversion: <u>CC</u>C · C<u>C</u>V · V<u>C</u>C · V<u>C</u>V</span>
! English letter
| b || c || d || f || g || h || j || k || l || m || n || p || q || r || s || t || v || w || x || z
|-
! Inng phoneme
| {{IPA|/u/}} || {{IPA|/a/}} || {{IPA|/i/}} || {{IPA|/l/}} || {{IPA|/a/}} || {{IPA|/ə/}} || {{IPA|/i/}} || {{IPA|/a/}} || {{IPA|/l/}} || {{IPA|/ŋ/}} || {{IPA|/ŋ/}} || {{IPA|/u/}} || {{IPA|/a/}} || {{IPA|/l/}} || {{IPA|/ə/}} || {{IPA|/i/}} || {{IPA|/ŋ/}} || {{IPA|/u/}} || {{IPA|/ə/}} || {{IPA|/ə/}}
|}
This table converts consonants into vowels. It is generally used for resolving consonant clusters.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|+ <span id=final>Finals: V<u>C</u> · CC<u>C</u> · CV<u>C</u> · VC<u>C</u> · VV<u>C</u></span>
! English letter
| b || c || d || f || g || h || j || k || l || m || n || p || q || r || s || t || v || w || x || z
|-
! Inng phoneme
| {{IPA|/(u)l/}} || {{IPA|/r/}} || {{IPA|/p/}} || {{IPA|/(i)n/}} || {{IPA|/(ə)ŋ/}} || {{IPA|/m/}} || {{IPA|/(i)l/}} || {{IPA|/(u)k/}} || {{IPA|/k/}} || {{IPA|/ts/}} || {{IPA|/n/}} || {{IPA|/(ŋ)p/}} || {{IPA|/(a)p/}} || {{IPA|/l/}} || {{IPA|/t/}} || {{IPA|/ŋ/}} || {{IPA|/(a)t/}} || {{IPA|/(l)m/}} || {{IPA|/(ŋ)k/}} || {{IPA|/(ə)r/}}
|}
This table is used for the final letter, if it is a consonant. The letter in parenthesis is skipped in VCC and VVC types, but included in all other sequence types. This letter overrides the parenthesized letter that table [[#initial|Initial]] otherwise would add.


== Grammar ==
== Grammar ==

Revision as of 06:26, 16 April 2013

Inng is a cypherlang based on English. The cypher itself has drawn inspiration from languages such as Mandarin, Cantonese, Korean, Thai and Vietnamese. All words in Inng have been created by cyphering English words. This cypher only takes the first three (sometimes four) letters of the English word into consideration however, so the relationship between the two languages' words is not always very transparent. There are also some lexical differences. For example plural you is always lăk, a reflex of "ya'll", in Inng; and some of the preposition have slightly different uses. Since the cypher creates so many homophones in Inng, new compounds have been created to resolve ambiguity. For example speech is suì-gak (speech-talk) and spell is suì-maeng (spell-magic). The grammar is based on English, but altered to some degree.





Inng
Inng-lan
Pronounced: [iŋː˩län˩]
Species: Human
Writing system: None. Romanization for conlanging purposes.
Credits
Creator: Qwynegold
Created: 21/02/2013

Phonology

Inng has only 16 phonemic consonants, and four vowels. But allophones there are a lot more of because of Inng's extensive allophony.

Phoneme and allophone inventories

Both phonemes and allophones are represented in the following tables. Generally the phonemes are represented with a letter that is also used for one of its allophones. The only exception is /r/ which is not realized as [r] but as rhotactization or other changes of the previous vowel.

Consonant inventory

All of the phonemes except for /r/ have as an allophone the same sound as what the phoneme is transcribed with. So for example /p/ has the allophone [p]. /r/ however is never realized as [r].

Consonants
Bilabial Labiod. Alveolar Retroflex Alveolo-palatal Palatal Velar Glottal
Plain Palatalized Plain Pal. Central Lateral Central Lateral Plain Lab. Plain Lab. Palatalized
Plain Labialized Plain Labialized Plain Labialized Plain Lab.
Nasal /m/
[mː]
[mʲ] /n/
[nː]
[nʷ] [ɳ] [n̠ʲ] [n̠ᶣ] /ŋ/
Syllabic nasal [m̩]
[m̩ː]
[n̩]
[n̩ː]
[ɳ̍ː] [ŋ̍]
[ŋ̍ː]
Plosive /p/
[pʰ]
/b/ [pʲʰ] [bʲ] /t/
[tʰ]
/d/ [tʷʰ] [dʷ] [ṯʲʰ] [ḏʲ] [t̠ᶣʰ] [d̠ᶣ] /k/
[kʰ]
/ɡ/ [kʲʰ] [ɡʲ]
Affricate /t͡s/
[t͡sʰ]
/d͜z/ [t͡sʷʰ] [d͜zʷ] [t͜ɬʰ] [d͡ɮ] [t͜ɬʷʰ] [d͡ɮʷ] [t͡ɕʰ] [d͜ʑ] [t͡ɕᶣʰ] [d͜ʑᶣ] [t͡ɬ̠ʲʰ] [d͡ɮ̠ʲ]
Syllabic affricate [t͡ɬ̩ʰ]
[t͡ɬ̩ːʰ]
[d͜ɮ̍]
[d͜ɮ̍ː]
Fricative [ɸ] [ɸʲ] /f/ [fʲ] /s/ [sʷ] [ɕ] [ɕᶣ] [ç] [çᶣ] [x] /h/
Approximant /l/
[lː]
[lʷ] [ɭ] [l̠ʲ] [l̠ᶣ] [j] [ɥ] [ɫ] [ʍ] [w]
Syllabic approximant [l̩]
[l̩ː]
[ɭ̍ː]
Rhotic /r/

The "syllabic affricates" are affricates with a syllabic release. From now on, all the affricates will be transcribed without the tiebar, as there is no ambiguity: Any plosive followed by any fricative in the same morpheme make an affricate in Inng.
Phones marked with [ʷ] are simultaneously labialized and velarized. So to be more precise, these phones are actually labio-velarized.
Throughout this article, the syllabic consonants may transcribed with a vertical line (◌̩ or ◌̍) even in phonemic transcription, and the corresponding non-syllabic consonants with inverted breve below (◌̯). This is for clarifying if they are in nucleus, or onset or coda. The lack of onset or coda may be transcribed with ∅.

Vowel inventory

Just as with the consonant table above, all of the vowels have the same sound as an allophone as what the phoneme is transcribed with.

Vowels
Front Central Back
Close /i/ [iː] [ʉː] /u/ [uː]
Close-mid [e] [eː] [o] [oː] [o˞ː]
Mid /ə/ [əː] [ɚː]
Open-mid [ɛ] [ɛː] [ɝː] [ɔ] [ɔː]
Near-open [ɐ˞ː]
Open /a/ [aː] [ä] [äː] [ɑ] [ɑː] [ɒ] [ɒː]

Tone inventory

Inng has a pitch accent system, where open syllables may have high or low pitch (which may be realized as [˥] respectively [˩]), or be unaccented. Closed syllables are all unaccented.

Tones
/˥/ [˩˥] [˩˩˥] [˥˩˥] [˥˩] [˥˩˩] /˩/

Syllable structure

The syllable structure for Inng is (O)N(N)(C), where O can be any consonant except for /ŋ, r/, N can be any vowel or /ŋ, l/, and C can be /m, n, ŋ, p, t, k, ts, l, r/. The only restrictions are that if the nucleus is /ŋŋ/, then neither the oneset nor coda can be a nasal, and that there can not be more than two /l/ in succession, regardless of what part of the syllable they are. All words are monosyllabic, except of course for compound words, which are frequent.
Since /ŋ, l/ can be both consonants and vowels, it is important to distinguish between nucleuses and onsets/codas. Phonemes in nucleus may have non-syllabic realizations, so there are words that on the phonemic level are different with regard to syllable structure, but which are realized the same way. However, pitch may distinguish these words, as the tones are dependent on the surrounding consonants.
It is also important to distinguish between words that have a single nucleus (N) and words that have a double nucleus (NN). Single and double nucleuses may both be realized as a long vowel, but with pitch distinguishing them from each other.

Allophony

Nucleuses

Vowels and syllabic nasals are long when in an open syllable. /ə, əə, a, aa/ become [o, oː, ɑ, ɑː] when followed by a velar (effectively one of [ŋ, k, w]). [w] also adds rounding to /a, aa/, see the table below. The allophonic changes caused by a preceding palatal phone however take precedence over coda consonants. For example /iəŋ/ (eight) is realized [jeŋ] and not *[joŋ] because the preceding [j] changes the /ə/ to [e].

Realizations of nucleuses
/i/ [i] /u/ [u] /ə/ [ə] /a/ [ä] /l/ [l̩] /ŋ/ [ŋ̍]
/ii/ [iː] /ui/ [ɥi] /əi/ [ej] /ai/ [aj] /li/ [l̠ʲi] /ŋi/ [n̠ʲi]
/iu/ [ju] /uu/ [uː] /əu/ [ow] /au/ [ɒw] /lu/ [lʷu] /ŋu/ [nʷu]
/iə/ [je] /uə/ [wo] /əə/ [əː] /aə/ [ɛ] /lə/ [lə] /ŋə/ [nə]
/ia/ [ja] /ua/ [wɒ] /əa/ [ɔ] /aa/ [äː] /la/ [lä] /ŋa/ [nä]
/il/ [il] /ul/ [ul] /əl/ [əl] /al/ [äl] /ll/ [l̩ː] /ŋl/ [n̩l]
/iŋ/ [iŋ] /uŋ/ [uŋ] /əŋ/ [oŋ] /aŋ/ [ɑŋ] /lŋ/ [l̩m] /ŋŋ/ [ŋ̍ː]

When the nucleus consists of two consonants, one will be syllabic and the other non-syllabic. Which one is which depends on the surrounding consonants. This table shows their realization in words with neither onset or coda. Also note that all word-final vowels and syllabic consonants are long.

Rimes with /r/

/r/ is never realized as [r]. Instead it causes different changes in the previous vowel. The table below lists all possible combinations.

Realizations of nucleus + /r/
/ir/ [ʉː] /ur/ [o˞ː] /ər/ [ɚː] /ar/ [ɐ˞ː] /lr/ [ɭ̍ː] /ŋr/ [ɳ̍ː]
/iir/ [ʉː] /uir/ [ɥʉː] /əir/ [ʉː] /air/ [ɚː] /lir/ [lʉː] /ŋir/ [nʉː]
/iur/ [jo˞ː] /uur/ [o˞ː] /əur/ [o˞ː] /aur/ [ɚː] /lur/ [lo˞ː] /ŋur/ [no˞ː]
/iər/ [jɚː] /uər/ [wɚː] /əər/ [ɚː] /aər/ [ɝː] /lər/ [lɚː] /ŋər/ [nɚː]
/iar/ [jɐ˞ː] /uar/ [wɐ˞ː] /əar/ [ɝː] /aar/ [ɐ˞ː] /lar/ [lɐ˞ː] /ŋar/ [nɐ˞ː]
/ilr/ [iɭ] /ulr/ [uɭ] /əlr/ [əɭ] /alr/ [äɭ] /llr/ [ɭ̍ː] /ŋlr/ [n̩ɭ]
/iŋr/ [iɳ] /uŋr/ [uɳ] /əŋr/ [əɳ] /aŋr/ [äɳ] /lŋr/ [l̩ɳ] /ŋŋr/ [ɳ̍ː]

/(ir), iir, əir/, /(ur), uur, əur/, /(ər), əər, air, aur/, /əar, aər/, /(ar), aar/, /(lr), llr/, respectively /(ŋr), ŋŋr/ are in complementary distribution. The sequences in parenthesis may have contrasting tone if the syllable is onsetless or begins with an unvoiced consonant. They are always realized the same as the rest of the rimes in their group when the syllable begins with a voiced consonant.

Consonants

Voiceless plosives and the affricate /ts/ are aspirated when in onset, but not in coda. /l/ is realized as [ɫ] after a [w] in the same syllable.

Consonants before close vowels and semivowels
Consonant +[i] +[j] +[u] +[w] +[ɥ]
/m/ [mʲi] [mj] [mu] [mw] [mɥ]
/n/​ [n̠ʲi] [n̠ʲ] [nʷu] [nʷ] [n̠ᶣ]
/p/ [pʲʰi] [pʰj] [pʰu] [pʰw] [pʰɥ]
/b/ [bʲi] [bj] [bu] [bw] [bɥ]
/t/ [t̠ʲʰi] [t̠ʲʰ] [tʷʰu] [tʷʰ] [t̠ᶣʰ]
/d/ [d̠ʲi] [d̠ʲ] [dʷu] [dʷ] [d̠ᶣ]
/k/ [kʲʰi] [kj] [kʰu] [kʰw] [kʰɥ]
/ɡ/ [ɡʲi] [ɡj] [ɡu] [ɡw] [ɡɥ]
/ts/ [tɕʰi] [tɕʰ] [tsʷʰu] [tsʷʰ] [tɕᶣʰ]
/dz/ [dʑi] [dʑ] [dzʷu] [dzʷ] [dʑᶣ]
/f/ [fʲi] [fj] [fu] [ɸ] [ɸɥ]
/s/ [ɕi] [ɕ] [sʷu] [sʷ] [ɕᶣ]
/h/ [çi] [ç] [ʍu] [ʍ] [çᶣ]
/l/ [l̠ʲi] [l̠ʲ] [lʷu] [lʷ] [l̠ᶣ]

The above table shows the realizations of consonants followed by [i, j, u, w, ɥ]. [j] is the realization of /i/ before another vowel, [w] is the realization of /u/ before a vowel other than /i/, and [ɥ] is the realization of /u/ before [i]. So for example the words /fing, fia˥, ful, fue˩, fui/ (fetch, feast, fort, foil (V.), foe) are pronunced [fʲiŋ˥˩, fjaː˥˩˥, ful˥˩, ɸoː˥˩˩, ɸɥiː˥˩˩].
There are some patterns to the realization of the consonants. Labials and velars become palatalized before [i] but form a cluster with [j], while alveolars become alveolo-palatal before [i, j], deleting the [j]. Labials and velars are not affected by [u, w, ɥ], with the exception of /f/ which become a bilabial when clustering with [w, ɥ]. Alveolars become labialized before [u, w], deleting the [w]. When followed by [ɥ] they become rounded alveolopalatals, deleting the [ɥ]. /h/ simply changes its point of articulation before all of these phones.

Syllabic consonants

The following table lists all possible syllables containing one or two syllabic consonants, and syllabic consonant followed by vowel. Combinations not allowed by the phonotactics are marked with a -.

Syllabic consonants
Nucleus /l/ -/∅/[1][2] -/m/ -/n/ -/ŋ/ -/p/ -/t/ -/k/ -/ts/ -/l/[3] -/r/[4] -/i/[5] -/u/[6] -V (/a, ə/)[7]
/∅l/- [l̩ː][8] [l̩m] [l̩n] [l̩ŋ] [l̩p] [l̩t] [l̩k] [l̩ts] [l̩ː][9] [ɭ̍ː][10] [l̠ʲi(ː)] [lʷu(ː)] [lV(ː)]
/ml/- [ml̩ː] [ml̩m] [ml̩n] [ml̩ŋ] [ml̩p] [ml̩t] [ml̩k] [ml̩ts] [ml̩ː] [mɭ̍ː] [ml̠ʲi(ː)] [mlʷu(ː)] [mlV(ː)]
/nl/-[11] [nl̩ː] [nl̩m] [nl̩n] [nl̩ŋ] [nl̩p] [nl̩t] [nl̩k] [nl̩ts] [nl̩ː] [nɭ̍ː] [nl̠ʲi(ː)] [nlʷu(ː)] [nlV(ː)]
/pl/- [pʰl̩ː] [pʰl̩m] [pʰl̩n] [pʰl̩ŋ] [pʰl̩p] [pʰl̩t] [pʰl̩k] [pʰl̩ts] [pʰl̩ː] [pʰɭ̍ː] [pʰl̠ʲi(ː)] [pʰlʷu(ː)] [pʰlV(ː)]
/bl/- [bl̩ː] [bl̩m] [bl̩n] [bl̩ŋ] [bl̩p] [bl̩t] ​ [bl̩k] [bl̩ts] [bl̩ː] [bɭ̍ː] [bl̠ʲi(ː)] [blʷu(ː)] [blV(ː)]
/tl/- [tɬ̩ːʰ] [tɬ̩ʰm] [tɬ̩ʰn] [tɬ̩ʰŋ] [tɬ̩ʰp] [tɬ̩ʰt] [tɬ̩ʰk] [tɬ̩ʰts] [tɬ̩ːʰ] [tʰɭ̍ː] [tɬ̠ʲʰi(ː)] [tɬʷu(ː)] [tɬʰV(ː)]
/dl/- [dɮ̍ː] [dɮ̍m] [dɮ̍n] [dɮ̍ŋ] [dɮ̍p] [dɮ̍t] [dɮ̍k] [dɮ̍ts] [dɮ̍ː] [dɭ̍ː] [dɮ̠ʲi(ː)] [dɮʷu(ː)] [dɮV(ː)]
/kl/- [kʰl̩ː] [kʰl̩m] [kʰl̩n] [kʰl̩ŋ] [kʰl̩p] [kʰl̩t] [kʰl̩k] [kʰl̩ts] [kʰl̩ː] [kʰɭ̍ː] [kʰl̠ʲi(ː)] [kʰlʷu(ː)] [kʰlV(ː)]
/ɡl/- [ɡl̩ː] [ɡl̩m] [ɡl̩n] [ɡl̩ŋ] [ɡl̩p] [ɡl̩t] [ɡl̩k] [ɡl̩ts] [ɡl̩ː] [ɡɭ̍ː] [ɡl̠ʲi(ː)] [ɡlʷu(ː)] [ɡlV(ː)]
/tsl/- [tsl̩ː] [tsl̩m] [tsl̩n] [tsl̩ŋ] [tsl̩p] [tsl̩t] [tsl̩k] [tsl̩ts] [tsl̩ː] [tsɭ̍ː] [tsl̠ʲi(ː)] [tslʷu(ː)] [tslV(ː)]
/dzl/- [dzl̩ː] [dzl̩m] [dzl̩n] [dzl̩ŋ] [dzl̩p] [dzl̩t] [dzl̩k] [dzl̩ts] [dzl̩ː] [dzɭ̍ː] [dzl̠ʲi(ː)] [dzlʷu(ː)] [dzlV(ː)]
/fl/- [fl̩ː] [fl̩m] [fl̩n] [fl̩ŋ] [fl̩p] [fl̩t] [fl̩k] [fl̩ts] [fl̩ː] [fɭ̍ː] [fl̠ʲi(ː)] [flʷu(ː)] [flV(ː)]
/sl/- [sl̩ː] [sl̩m] [sl̩n] [sl̩ŋ] [sl̩p] [sl̩t] [sl̩k] [sl̩ts] [sl̩ː] [sɭ̍ː] [sl̠ʲi(ː)] [slʷu(ː)] [slV(ː)]
/hl/- [xl̩ː] [xl̩m] [xl̩n] [xl̩ŋ] [xl̩p] [xl̩t] [xl̩k] [xl̩ts] [xl̩ː] [xɭ̍ː] [xl̠ʲi(ː)] [xlʷu(ː)] [xlV(ː)]
/ll/- [l̩ː][12] [l̩ːm] [l̩ːn] [l̩ːŋ] [l̩ːp] [l̩ːt] [l̩ːk] [l̩ːts] - [ɭ̍ː][13] [l̠ʲːi(ː)] [lʷːu(ː)] [lːV(ː)]
Nucleus /ll/ -/∅/[14] -/m/ -/n/ -/ŋ/ -/p/ -/t/ -/k/ -/ts/ -/l/ -/r/[15] -/i/ -/u/ -V (/a, ə/)
/∅ll/- [l̩ː][16] [l̩ːm] [l̩ːn] [l̩ːŋ] [l̩ːp] [l̩ːt] [l̩ːk] [l̩ːts] - [ɭ̍ː][17] - - -
/mll/- [ml̩ː] [ml̩ːm] [ml̩ːn] [ml̩ːŋ] [ml̩ːp] [ml̩ːt] [ml̩ːk] [ml̩ːts] - [mɭ̍ː] - - -
/nll/- [nl̩ː] [nl̩ːm] [nl̩ːn] [nl̩ːŋ] [nl̩ːp] [nl̩ːt] [nl̩ːk] [nl̩ːts] - [nɭ̍ː] - - -
/pll/- [pʰl̩ː] [pʰl̩ːm] [pʰl̩ːn] [pʰl̩ːŋ] [pʰl̩ːp] [pʰl̩ːt] [pʰl̩ːk] [pʰl̩ːts] - [pʰɭ̍ː] - - -
/bll/- [bl̩ː] [bl̩ːm] [bl̩ːn] [bl̩ːŋ] [bl̩ːp] [bl̩ːt] ​ [bl̩ːk] [bl̩ːts] - [bɭ̍ː] - - -
/tll/- [tɬ̩ːʰ] [tɬ̩ːʰm] [tɬ̩ːʰn] [tɬ̩ːʰŋ] [tɬ̩ːʰp] [tɬ̩ːʰt] [tɬ̩ːʰk] [tɬ̩ːʰts] - [tʰɭ̍ː] - - -
/dll/- [dɮ̍ː] [dɮ̍ːm] [dɮ̍ːn] [dɮ̍ːŋ] [dɮ̍ːp] [dɮ̍ːt] [dɮ̍ːk] [dɮ̍ːts] - [dɭ̍ː] - - -
/kll/- [kʰl̩ː] [kʰl̩ːm] [kʰl̩ːn] [kʰl̩ːŋ] [kʰl̩ːp] [kʰl̩ːt] [kʰl̩ːk] [kʰl̩ːts] - [kʰɭ̍ː] - - -
/ɡll/- [ɡl̩ː] [ɡl̩ːm] [ɡl̩ːn] [ɡl̩ːŋ] [ɡl̩ːp] [ɡl̩ːt] [ɡl̩ːk] [ɡl̩ːts] - [ɡɭ̍ː] - - -
/tsll/- [tsl̩ː] [tsl̩ːm] [tsl̩ːn] [tsl̩ːŋ] [tsl̩ːp] [tsl̩ːt] [tsl̩ːk] [tsl̩ːts] - [tsɭ̍ː] - - -
/dzll/- [dzl̩ː] [dzl̩ːm] [dzl̩ːn] [dzl̩ːŋ] [dzl̩ːp] [dzl̩ːt] [dzl̩ːk] [dzl̩ːts] - [dzɭ̍ː] - - -
/fll/- [fl̩ː] [fl̩ːm] [fl̩ːn] [fl̩ːŋ] [fl̩ːp] [fl̩ːt] [fl̩ːk] [fl̩ːts] - [fɭ̍ː] - - -
/sll/- [sl̩ː] [sl̩ːm] [sl̩ːn] [sl̩ːŋ] [sl̩ːp] [sl̩ːt] [sl̩ːk] [sl̩ːts] - [sɭ̍ː] - - -
/hll/- [xl̩ː] [xl̩ːm] [xl̩ːn] [xl̩ːŋ] [xl̩ːp] [xl̩ːt] [xl̩ːk] [xl̩ːts] - [xɭ̍ː] - - -
/lll/- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Nucleus /lŋ/ -/∅/ -/m/ -/n/ -/ŋ/ -/p/ -/t/ -/k/ -/ts/ -/l/ -/r/ -/i/ -/u/ -V (/a, ə/)
/∅lŋ/-[18] [l̩m] [l̩mː] [lm̩n] [l̩nː] [lm̩p] [lm̩t] [lm̩k] [lm̩ts] [lm̩l] [l̩ɳ] - - -
/mlŋ/- [ml̩m] [ml̩mː] [mlm̩n] [ml̩nː] [mlm̩p] [mln̩t] [mlm̩k] [mln̩ts] [mlm̩l] [ml̩ɳ] - - -
/nlŋ/- [nl̩m] [nl̩mː] [nlm̩n] [nl̩nː] [nlm̩p] [nln̩t] [nlm̩k] [nln̩ts] [nlm̩l] [nl̩ɳ] - - -
/plŋ/- [pʰl̩m] [pʰl̩mː] [pʰlm̩n] [pʰl̩nː] [pʰlm̩p] [pʰln̩t] [pʰlm̩k] [pʰln̩ts] [pʰlm̩l] [pʰl̩ɳ] - - -
/blŋ/- [bl̩m] [bl̩mː] [blm̩n] [bl̩nː] [blm̩p] [bln̩t] [blm̩k] [bln̩ts] [[blm̩l] [bl̩ɳ] - - -
/tlŋ/- [tɬ̩ʰm] [tɬ̩ʰmː] [tɬʰm̩n] [tɬ̩ʰnː] [tɬʰm̩p] [tɬʰn̩t] [tɬʰm̩k] [tɬʰn̩ts] [tɬʰm̩l] [tɬ̩ʰɳ] - - -
/dlŋ/- [dɮ̍m] [dɮ̍mː] [dɮm̩n] [dɮ̍nː] [dɮm̩p] [dɮn̩t] [dɮm̩k] [dɮn̩ts] [dɮm̩l] [dɮ̍ɳ] - - -
/klŋ/- [kʰl̩m] [kʰl̩mː] [kʰlm̩n] [kʰl̩nː] [kʰlm̩p] [kʰln̩t] [kʰlm̩k] [kʰln̩ts] ​ [kʰlm̩l] [kʰl̩ɳ] - - -
/ɡlŋ/- [ɡl̩m] [ɡl̩mː] [ɡlm̩n] [ɡl̩nː] [ɡlm̩p] [ɡln̩t] [ɡlm̩k] [ɡln̩ts] [ɡlm̩l] [ɡl̩ɳ] - - -
/tslŋ/- [tsl̩m] [tsʰl̩mː] [tsʰlm̩n] [tsʰl̩nː] [tsʰlm̩p] [tʰsln̩t]​ ​ [tsʰlm̩k] [tsʰln̩ts] [tsʰlm̩l] [tsʰl̩ɳ] - - -
/dzlŋ/- [dzl̩m] [dzl̩mː] [dzlm̩n] [dzl̩nː] [dzlm̩p] [dzln̩t] [dzlm̩k] [dzln̩ts] [dzlm̩l] [dzl̩ɳ] - - -
/flŋ/- [fl̩m] [fl̩mː] [flm̩n] [fl̩nː] [flm̩p] [fln̩t] [flm̩k] [fln̩ts] [flm̩l] [fl̩ɳ] - - -
/slŋ/- [sl̩m] [sl̩mː] [slm̩n] [sl̩nː] [slm̩p] [sln̩t] [slm̩k] [sln̩ts] [slm̩l] ​ [sl̩ɳ] - - -
/hlŋ/- [xl̩m] [xl̩mː] [xlm̩n] [xl̩nː] [xlm̩p] [xln̩t] [xlm̩k] [xln̩ts] [xlm̩l] [xl̩ɳ] - - -
/llŋ/- [l̩ːm] [l̩ːmː] [lːm̩n] [l̩ːnː] [lːm̩p] [lːn̩t] [lːm̩k] [lːn̩ts] [lːm̩l] [l̩ːɳ] - - -
Nucleus /ŋ/ -/∅/[19][20] -/m/[21] -/n/[22] -/ŋ/ -/p/ -/t/ -/k/ -/ts/ -/l/[23] -/r/[24] -/i/[25] -/u/[26] -V (/a, ə/)[27]
/∅ŋ/- [ŋ̍ː][28] [ŋ̍m] [m̩n] [ŋ̍ː][29] [m̩p] [n̩t] [ŋ̍k] [n̩ts] [n̩l] [ɳ̍ː][30] [n̠ʲi(ː)] [nʷu(ː)] [nV(ː)]
/mŋ/- [mn̩ː][31] [mn̩m] [mn̩ː][32] [mn̩ː][33] [m̩ːp] [mn̩t] [mn̩k] [mn̩ts] [mn̩l] [mɳ̍ː] [mn̠ʲi(ː)] [mnʷu(ː)] [mnV(ː)]
/nŋ/- [ŋ̍ː][34] [ŋ̍ːm] [ŋ̍ːn] [nm̩ː] [nm̩p] [ŋ̍ːt] [ŋ̍ːk] [ŋ̍ːts] [n̩ːl] [ɳ̍ː][35] [n̠ʲːi(ː)] [nʷːu(ː)] [nːV(ː)]
/pŋ/- [pʰn̩ː] [pʰn̩m] [pʰn̩ː] [pʰŋ̍ː] [pʰn̩p] [pʰn̩t] [pʰn̩k] [pʰn̩ts] [pʰn̩l] [pʰɳ̍ː] [pʰn̠ʲi(ː)] [pʰnʷu(ː)] [pʰnV(ː)]
/bŋ/- [bn̩ː] [bn̩m] [bn̩ː] ​ [bŋ̍ː] [bn̩p] [bn̩t] [bn̩k] [bn̩ts] [bn̩l] [bɳ̍ː] [bn̠ʲi(ː)] [bnʷu(ː)] [bnV(ː)]
/tŋ/- [tʰm̩ː] [tʰm̩ː] [tʰm̩n] [tʰŋ̍ː] [tʰm̩p] [tʰm̩t] [tʰm̩k] [tʰm̩ts] [tʰm̩l] [tʰɳ̍ː] [tʰmʲi(ː)] [tʰmu(ː)] [tʰmV(ː)]
/dŋ/- [dm̩ː] [dm̩ː] [dm̩n] [dŋ̍ː] [dm̩p] [dm̩t] ​ [dm̩k] [dm̩ts] [dm̩l] [dɳ̍ː] [dmʲi(ː)] [dmu(ː)] [dmV(ː)]
/kŋ/- [kʰm̩ː] [kʰm̩ː] [kʰm̩n] [kʰŋ̍ː] [kʰm̩p] [kʰn̩t] [kʰm̩k] [kʰn̩ts] [kʰn̩l] [kʰɳ̍ː] [kʰmʲi(ː)] [kʰmu(ː)] [kʰmV(ː)]
/ɡŋ/- [ɡm̩ː] [ɡm̩ː] [ɡm̩n] [ɡŋ̍ː] [ɡm̩p] [ɡn̩t] [ɡm̩k] [ɡn̩ts] [ɡn̩l] [ɡɳ̍ː] [ɡmʲi(ː)] [ɡmu(ː)] [ɡmV(ː)]
/tsŋ/- [tsʰm̩ː] [tsʰm̩ː] [tsʰm̩n] [tsʰŋ̍ː] [tsʰm̩p] [tsʰm̩t] [tsʰm̩k] [tsʰm̩ts] [tsʰm̩l] [tsʰɳ̍ː] [tsʰmʲi(ː)] [tsʰmu(ː)] [tsmV(ː)]
/dzŋ/- [dzm̩ː] [dzm̩ː] [dzm̩n] [dzŋ̍ː] [dzm̩p] [dzm̩t] [dzm̩k] [dzm̩ts] [dzm̩l] [dzɳ̍ː] [dzmʲi(ː)] [dzmu(ː)] [dzmV(ː)]
/fŋ/- [fn̩ː] [fn̩m] [fn̩ː] [fŋ̍ː] [fn̩p] [fn̩t] [fn̩k] [fn̩ts] [fn̩l] [fɳ̍ː] [fn̠ʲi(ː)] [fnʷu(ː)] [fnV(ː)]
/sŋ/- [sm̩ː] [sm̩ː] [sm̩n] [sŋ̍ː] [sm̩p] [sm̩t] [sm̩k] [sm̩ts] [sm̩l] [sɳ̍ː] [smʲi(ː)] [smu(ː)] [smV(ː)]
/hŋ/- [xm̩ː] [xm̩ː] [xm̩n] [xŋ̍ː] [xm̩p] [xn̩t] [xm̩k] [xn̩ts] [xn̩l] [xɳ̍ː] [xmʲi(ː)] [xmu(ː)] [xmV(ː)]
/lŋ/-[36] [lm̩ː] [lm̩ː] [lm̩n] [ln̩ː] [lm̩p] [lm̩t] [lm̩k] [lm̩ts] [lm̩l] [lɳ̍ː] [lmʲi(ː)] [lmu(ː)] [lmV(ː)]
Nucleus /ŋl/ -/∅/[37] -/m/ -/n/ -/ŋ/ -/p/ -/t/ -/k/ -/ts/ -/l/ -/r/ -/i/ -/u/ -V (/a, ə/)
/∅ŋl/-[38] [n̩l] [nl̩m] [nl̩n] [nl̩ŋ] [nl̩p] [nl̩t] [nl̩k] [nl̩ts] [n̩lː] [n̩ɭ] - - -
/mŋl/- [mn̩l] [mn̩lm] [mn̩ln] [mn̩lŋ] [mn̩lp] [mn̩lt] [mn̩lk] [mn̩lts] [mn̩lː] [mn̩ɭ] - - -
/nŋl/- [ŋ̍ːl] [ŋ̍ːlm] [ŋ̍ːln] [ŋ̍ːlŋ] [ŋ̍ːlp] [ŋ̍ːlt] [ŋ̍ːlk] [ŋ̍ːlts] [ŋ̍ːlː] [ŋ̍ːɭ] - - -
/pŋl/- [pʰn̩l] [pʰn̩lm] [pʰn̩ln] [pʰn̩lŋ] [pʰn̩lp] [pʰn̩lt] [pʰn̩lk] [pʰn̩lts] [pʰn̩lː] [pʰn̩ɭ] - - -
/bŋl/- [bn̩l] [bn̩lm] [bn̩ln] [bn̩lŋ] [bn̩lp] [bn̩lt] [bn̩lk] [bn̩lts] [bn̩lː] [bn̩ɭ] - - -
/tŋl/- [tʰm̩l] [tʰm̩lm] [tʰm̩ln] [tʰm̩lŋ] [tʰm̩lp] [tʰm̩lt] [tʰm̩lk] [tʰm̩lts] [tʰm̩lː] [tʰm̩ɭ] - - -
/dŋl/- [dm̩l] [dm̩lm] [dm̩ln] [dm̩lŋ] [dm̩lp] [dm̩lt] [dm̩lk] [dm̩lts] [dm̩lː] [dm̩ɭ] - - -
/kŋl/- [kʰm̩l] [kʰm̩lm] [kʰm̩ln] [kʰm̩lŋ] [kʰm̩lp] [kʰm̩lt] [kʰm̩lk] [kʰm̩lts] [kʰm̩lː] [kʰm̩ɭ] - - -
/ɡŋl/- [ɡm̩l] [ɡm̩lm] [ɡm̩ln] [ɡm̩lŋ] [ɡm̩lp] [ɡm̩lt] [ɡm̩lk] [ɡm̩lts] [ɡm̩lː] [ɡm̩ɭ] - - -
/tsŋl/- [tsʰm̩l] [tsʰm̩lm] [tsʰm̩ln] [tsʰm̩lŋ] [tsʰm̩lp] [tsʰm̩lt] [tsʰm̩lk] [tsʰm̩lts] [tsʰm̩lː] [tsʰm̩ɭ] - - -
/dzŋl/- [dzm̩l] [dzm̩lm] [dzm̩ln] [dzm̩lŋ] [dzm̩lp] ​ [dzm̩lt] [dzm̩lk] [dzm̩lts] [dzm̩lː] [dzm̩ɭ] - - -
/fŋl/- [fn̩l] [fn̩lm] [fn̩ln] [fn̩lŋ] [fn̩lp] [fn̩lt] [fn̩lk] [fn̩lts] [fn̩lː] [fn̩ɭ] - - -
/sŋl/- [sm̩l] [sm̩lm] [sm̩ln] [sm̩lŋ] [sm̩lp] [sm̩lt] [sm̩lk] [sm̩lts] [sm̩lː] [sm̩ɭ] - - -
/hŋl/- [xm̩l] [xm̩lm] [xm̩ln] [xm̩lŋ] [xm̩lp] [xm̩lt] [xm̩lk] [xm̩lts] [xm̩lː] [xm̩ɭ] - - -
/lŋl/- [lm̩l] [lm̩lm] [lm̩ln] [lm̩lŋ] [lm̩lp] [lm̩lt] [lm̩lk] [lm̩lts] [lm̩lː] [lm̩ɭ] - - -
/Nucleus /ŋŋ/ -/∅/[39] -/m/ -/n/ -/ŋ/ -/p/ -/t/ -/k/ -/ts/ -/l/ -/r/[40] -/i/ -/u/ -V (/a, ə/)
/∅ŋŋ/- [ŋ̍ː][41] - - - [m̩ːp] [n̩ːt] [ŋ̍ːk] [n̩ːts] [n̩ːl] [ɳ̍ː][42] - - -
/mŋŋ/- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
/nŋŋ/- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
/pŋŋ/- [pʰn̩ː] - - - [pʰn̩ːp] [pʰn̩ːt] [pʰn̩ːk] [pʰn̩ːts] [pʰn̩ːl] [pʰɳ̍ː] - - -
/bŋŋ/- [bn̩ː] - - ​ - [bn̩ːp] [bn̩ːt] [bn̩ːk] [bn̩ːts] [bn̩ːl] [bɳ̍ː] - - -
/tŋŋ/- [tʰm̩ː] - - - [tʰm̩ːp] [tʰm̩ːt] [tʰm̩ːk] [tʰm̩ːts] [tʰm̩ːl] [tʰɳ̍ː] - - -
/dŋŋ/- [dm̩ː] - - - [dm̩ːp] [dm̩ːt] ​ [dm̩ːk] [dm̩ːts] [dm̩ːl] [dɳ̍ː] - - -
/kŋŋ/- [kʰm̩ː] - - - [kʰm̩ːp] [kʰn̩ːt] [kʰm̩ːk] [kʰn̩ːts] [kʰn̩ːl] [kʰɳ̍ː] - - -
/ɡŋŋ/- [ɡm̩ː] - - - [ɡm̩ːp] [ɡn̩ːt] [ɡm̩ːk] [ɡn̩ːts] [ɡn̩ːl] [ɡɳ̍ː] - - -
/tsŋŋ/- [tsʰm̩ː] - - - [tsʰm̩ːp] [tsʰm̩ːt] [tsʰm̩ːk] [tsʰm̩ːts] [tsʰm̩ːl] [tsʰɳ̍ː] - - -
/dzŋŋ/- [dzm̩ː] - - - [dzm̩ːp] [dzm̩ːt] [dzm̩ːk] [dzm̩ːts] [dzm̩ːl] [dzɳ̍ː] - - -
/fŋŋ/- [fn̩ː] - - - [fn̩ːp] [fn̩ːt] [fn̩ːk] [fn̩ːts] [fn̩ːl] [fɳ̍ː] - - -
/sŋŋ/- [sm̩ː] - - - [sm̩ːp] [sm̩ːt] [sm̩ːk] [sm̩ːts] [sm̩ːl] [sɳ̍ː] - - -
/hŋŋ/- [xm̩ː] - - - [xm̩ːp] [xn̩ːt] [xm̩ːk] [xn̩ːts] [xn̩ːl] [xɳ̍ː] - - -
/lŋŋ/- [lm̩ː] - - - [lm̩ːp] [lm̩ːt] [lm̩ːk] [lm̩ːts] [lm̩ːl] [lɳ̍ː] - - -
  1. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^  Rimes consisting of a nucleus syllabic consonant followed by no coda, and a nucleus syllabic consonant followed by an identical coda consonant, are both realized as a long syllabic consonant. But tones may distinguish these from each other.
  2. ^ ^  Rimes consisting of /l̩‌∅/ are realized the same as rimes consisting of /l̩l̩‌∅/, but they may be distinguished by tone.
  3. ^ ^  Rimes consisting of /l̩r/ are realized the same as rimes consisting of /l̩l̩r/, but they may be distinguished by tone.
  4. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^  This column shows how a nucleus consisting of consonant and a vowel is realized in different environments. This column only displays (O)NN without specifying a coda. The vowels are therefore marked with [(ː)], because they are long in open syllables, and short in closed syllables. /a, ə/ are realized as [ɑ(ː), o(ː)] when followed by a velar coda, and as [ä(ː), ə(ː)] in all other environments.
  5. ^ ^ ^ ^  /∅‌l̩‌∅, ∅‌l̩l̯, l̯l̩‌∅, ∅‌l̩l̩‌∅/ are all realized as [l̩ː], but may be distinguished by tone.
  6. ^ ^ ^  /∅‌l̩r, l̯l̩r, ∅‌l̩l̩r/ are all realized as [ɭ̍ː], but they may be distinguished by tone.
  7. ^ ^  The body /∅‌ŋ̍l̩/ is in some cases realized the same as the body /n̯l̩/, but they may be distinguished by tone.
  8. ^ ^  The body /∅‌l̩ŋ̍/ is in some environments realized the same as body /l̯ŋ̍/, but they may be distinguished by tone.
  9. ^ ^  The rimes /ŋ̍‌∅/ and /ŋ̍ŋ̍‌∅/ are both realized as [ŋ̍ː], but they may be distinguished by tone.
  10. ^ ^  The rimes /ŋ̍l̯/ and /ŋ̍l̩‌∅/ are in some environments realized the same, but they may be distinguished by tone.
  11. ^ ^  Rimes consisting of /ŋ̍r/ are realized the same as rimes consisting of /ŋ̍ŋ̍r/, but they may be distinguished by tone.
  12. ^ ^ ^  /∅‌ŋ̍‌∅, nŋ̍‌∅, ∅‌ŋ̍ŋ̍‌∅/ are all realized as [ŋ̍ː], but they may be distinguished by tone.
  13. ^ ^ ^  /∅‌ŋ̍r/, /nŋ̍r/ and /∅‌ŋ̍ŋ̍r/ are all realized as [ɳ̍ː], but they may be distinguished by tone.
  14. ^ ^ ^  /mŋ̍n/ and /mŋ̍ŋ/ are in complementary distribution, both being realized [mn̩ː˩]. /mŋ̍/ however may be distinguished by tone, being either [mn̩ː˩] or [mn̩ː˩˥].

The patterns found here are that /r/ makes the previous syllabic consonant retroflex, and a preceding /t/ or /d/ makes /l/ a lateral fricative. Otherwise /l/ does not change much. /ŋ/ on the other hand is more complicated. Generally it becomes [n] after a labial, and [m] after other consonants. When it precedes a consonant it generally becomes homorganic. When it has consonants on both sides, that call for different nasals, usually the onset consonant decides the realization of /ŋ/. But if the onset consonant is velar, or the coda is /ŋ̑/, then it will usually be homorganic with the coda consonant. /l̩l̩/ and /ŋ̍ŋ̍/ are realized the same as /l̩/ respectively /ŋ̍/, only with length added when their counterparts would otherwise be short. When it comes to /l̩ŋ̍/ and /ŋ̍l̩/, the nasal changes the same ways as the single /ŋ̍/ does next to the onset or coda consonant. In both of these phonemic nucleuses, usually the nasal stays syllabic while the lateral will be non-syllabic.
In nucleuses consisting of a vowel followed by /l/, the /l/ is realized as [l] in all environments. When a vowel is followed by /ŋ̍/, the nucleus consonant is realized as [m] before /n, p/, as [n] before /t, ts, l/, and as [ŋ] before /m, ŋ, k, ∅/. /Vŋ̍ŋ̑/ is therefore realized as [Vŋː].

Allotones

Inng has pitch accent, but the word tone is used throughout this article for allophonic pitch level or contour. The phonemic pitch accents are high, low, and lack of accent. All three options may be found in open syllables, while closed syllables are unaccented. Closed syllable in this case means a syllable with a phonemic coda. A syllable that has for example the nucleus /al/ and no coda is considered an open syllable when the /l/ is a part of the nucleus, even though it would be realized as a non-syllabic consonant. Syllables containing no voiced phones (having [ɬ̩(ː)(ʰ)] in the nucleus) are considered to be accentless.
A nucleus consisting of a single phoneme may have one of the tones [˥, ˥˩, ˩˥, ˩], and a nucleus consisting of two phonemes may have one of the tones [˥˩˥, ˥˩˩, ˩˩˥, ˩]. Otherwise they have completely separate sets of tones, except for that both may have [˩]. For this reason tone distinguishes nucleuses consisting of a single phoneme, from nucleuses consisting of two phonemes, even when they are both realized as long. However, because both may have [˩], nucleus consonants are in complementary distribution with coda consonants when preceded by a true vowel and when the syllable has low pitch.
The following table shows tone realizations. The rows show different types of syllables, where N stands for nucleus, U for unvoiced consonant, and V for voiced consonant. Syllables marked with ˥ or ˩ in the phonemic representation are syllables with high or low pitch accent. Unmarked syllables are accentless. The columns stand for the syllable's position in a sentence. The _ stands for the position of the given syllable, and the symbols on both sides of it represent the tone height of the surrounding syllables:

  • ∅ to the left means that the given syllable is utterance initial.
  • ∅ to the right means that the syllable is utterance final.
  • H to the left means that the syllable is preceded by a syllable ending with a voiceless consonant or a vowel ending with high pitch ([˥, ˥˩˥, ˩˥, ˩˩˥]).
  • H to the right means the the syllable is followed by a syllable beginning with an unvoiced consonant or a vowel beginning with high pitch ([˥, ˥˩˥, ˥˩, ˥˩˩]).
  • L to the left means the syllable is preceded by a syllable ending with a voiced consonant or a vowel ending with low pitch ([˥˩, ˥˩˩, ˩]).
  • L to the right means that the syllable is followed by a syllable beginning with a voiced consonant or a vowel beginning with low pitch ([˩˥, ˩˩˥, ˩]).
Allotones
Syllable type ∅ _ ∅ ∅ _ H ∅ _ L H _ ∅ H _ H H _ L L _ ∅ L _ H L _ L
/N/ [N˥] [N˩] [N˥] [N˥˩] [N˩] [N˩˥] [N˩]
/N˥/ [N˥] [N˩˥]
/N˩/ [N˩] [N˥˩] [N˩]
/NU/ [NU˥] [NU˩˥]
/NV/ [NV˩] [NV˥˩] [NV˩]
/UN/ [UN˥] [UN˥˩] [UN˥] [UN˥˩] [UN˥] [UN˥˩]
/UN˥/ [UN˥]
/UN˩/ [UN˥˩]
/UNU/ [UNU˥]
/UNV/ [UNV˥˩]
/VN/ [VN˩] [VN˩˥] [VN˩] [VN˩˥] [VN˩] [VN˩˥] [VN˩]
/VN˥/ [VN˩˥]
/VN˩/ [VN˩]
/VNU/ [VNU˩˥]
/VNV/ [VNV˩]
Syllable type ∅ _ ∅ ∅ _ H ∅ _ L H _ ∅ H _ H H _ L L _ ∅ L _ H L _ L
/NN/ [NN˩] [NN˩˩˥] [NN˩] [NN˥˩˩] [NN˥˩˥] [NN˥˩˩] [NN˩] [NN˩˩˥] [NN˩]
/NN˥/ [NN˩˩˥] [NN˥˩˥] [NN˩˩˥]
/NN˩/ [NN˩] [NN˥˩˩] [NN˩]
/NNU/ [NNU˩˩˥] [NNU˥˩˥] [NNU˩˩˥]
/NNV/ [NNV˩] [NNV˥˩˩] [NNV˩]
/UNN/ [UNN˥˩˩] [UNN˥˩˥] [UNN˥˩˩] [UNN˥˩˥] [UNN˥˩˩] [UNN˥˩˥] [UNN˥˩˩]
/UNN˥/ [UNN˥˩˥]
/UNN˩/ [UNN˥˩˩]
/UNNU/ [UNNU˥˩˥]
/UNNV/​ [UNNV˥˩˩]
/VNN/ [VNN˩] [VNN˩˩˥] [VNN˩] [VNN˩˩˥] [VNN˩] [VNN˩˩˥] [VNN˩]
/VNN˥/ [VNN˩˩˥]
/VNN˩/[43] [VNN˩]
/VNNU/ [VNNU˩˩˥]
/VNNV/ [VNNV˩]
Syllable type ∅ _ ∅ ∅ _ H ∅ _ L H _ ∅ H _ H H _ L L _ ∅ L _ H L _ L

^ Syllables of the type /VNN˩/ are in complementary distribution with /VN˩/ syllables.

Transcription

The Inng people themselves were illiterate, so there is no native Inng orthography. There is however a romanization, which is partly based on phonemic representation, partly on phonetic representation, and part of it is based on other spelling conventions.

Consonants
Labial Alveolar Back
Nasals /m/
<m>
/n/
<n>[44]
/ŋ/
<ng>[45]
Plosives /p/
<p>
/b/
<b>
/t/
<t>
/d/
<d>
/k/
<k>
/ɡ/
<g>
Affricates /ts/
<z>
/dz/
<j>
Fricatives /f/
<f>
/s/
<s>
/h/
<h>
Approximant /l/
<l>
​ Vowels Close Mid Open
/i/
<i>
/u/
<u>
/ə/
<e>
/a/
<a>

^ ^  /ŋ/ in nucleus may be spelled several ways depending on how it is realized. /n, ŋ/ in onset or coda are most often <n, ng>, but they may also be spelled differently depending on realization. See Nasals below.

Pitch accent and diacritics

  • High pitch is marked with an acute accent (◌́).
  • Low pitch is marked with a grave accent (◌̀).
  • Accentless syllables with a nucleus consisting of two identical phonemes, or vowel + syllabic consonant, are marked with dot below (◌̣).
  • Accentless syllables with a nucleus consisting of syllabic consonant + vowel, and lacking an onset consonant, are marked with breve (◌̆).
  • Other accentless syllables (including all syllables with a single nucleus) are unmarked.

Some examples: /tu/ [tʷʰuː˥] <too> (go), /tuu/ [tʷʰuː˥˩˩] <tọo> (goo), /tuu˥/ [tʷʰuː˥˩˥] <toó> (goose), /tuu˩/ [tʷʰuː˥˩˩] <toò> (good). This is an example of a four-way contrast of words with single nucleus, double unaccented nucleus, double nucleus with high pitch, and double nucleus with low pitch. Even though tọo and toò are both pronunced the same in isolation like this, the tone of tọo varies depending on the environment, while toò always has [˥˩˩].
To illustrate the use of breve, take the following minimal pair: /l̯iŋ̑/ [l̠ʲiŋ˩] <ling> (let), /l̩iŋ̑/ [l̠ʲiŋ˩] <lĭng> (yet). Though they are realized the same utterance initially, lĭng may change it's tone to [˥˩˩] in some environments, while ling always has [˩]. The breve marks that the beginning on the tone may vary. A dot below marks that it is the end of the tone that may vary. In this case, a dot below would have meant that the nucleus is /iŋ/ instead of /li/.
For the placement of the diacritic, see Nucleuses and Rimes with /r/ below.

Nasals

The syllabic nasal /ŋ/ is written with <m> when it is realized as [m, m̩], and <ng> when realized as [ŋ, ŋ̍] but not followed by a velar coda consonant. In all other cases it is written <n>. Onset and coda nasals are also written accordingly to their realization. Most of the time they are realized the same as their phonemic representation indicates, but in some cases when the nucleus also contains a nasal, it may be different. See the table at Syllabic consonants.

Nucleuses

The nucleuses have a lot of variation in their transcription, depending on these phonemes' environment. The single nucleuses /i, u, ə, a/ are transcribed with <i, u, e, a>, while their long counterparts are transcribed <ee, oo, eh, ah>. Single vowels are transcribed as long in open syllables, because phonetically they are long in that position. Tone marks help distinguishing these from phonemically double nucleuses; if the <ee, oo, eh, ah> lack a diacritic, then it is phonemically a single nucleus. The syllabic consonants on the other hand are transcribed as short in open syllables, regardless of if they are phonemically a single or double nucleus. In closed syllables, /ll, ŋŋ/ are transcribed with doubled letters.

Transcription of nucleuses
/i/- /u/- /ə/- /a/- /l/- /ŋ/-
-∅ /i/
<i, ee>
/u/
<u, oo>
/ə/
<e, eh>
/a/
<a, ah>
/l/
<l>
/ŋ/
<m, n, ng>
-/i/ /ii/
<ee>
/ui/
<yui, ui>
/əi/
<ei>
/ai/
<ai>
/li/
<li, lee>
/ŋi/
<mi, ni, mee, nee>
-/u/ /iu/
<yu, iu>
/uu/
<oo>
/əu/
<ou>
/au/
<au>
/lu/
<lu, loo>
/ŋu/
<mu, nu, moo, noo>
-/ə/ /iə/
<ye, ie>
/uə/
<wo, uo>
/əə/
<eh>
/aə/
<ae>
/lə/
<le, leh>
/ŋə/
<me, ne, meh, neh>
-/a/ /ia/
<ya, ia>
/ua/
<wa, ua>
/əa/
<eo>
/aa/
<ah>
/la/
<la, lah>
/ŋa/
<ma, na, mah, nah>
-/l/ /il/
<il>
/ul/
<ul>
/əl/
<el>
/al/
<al>
/ll/
<ll, l>
/ŋl/
<ml, nl>
-/ŋ/ /iŋ/
<ing>
/uŋ/
<ung>
/əŋ/
<ong>
/aŋ/
<ang>
/lŋ/
<ln, lm>
/ŋŋ/
<mm, nn, m, n, ng>

In this table, spellings that are only found word-initially (in syllables without onset) are marked with blue, and spellings only found finally (in open syllables) are marked with green.
The spelling of the nasal varies according to its realization. See Nasals above, and the table at Syllabic consonants.
The underlining marks which letter is accented with acute or grave accent. So for example the syllable /sii/ with low pitch would be transcribed <seè>. Breve and dot below are placed the same as acute and grave, except for in the digraphs <ee, oo, eo, ae> where they are placed on the first vowel letter, and in <yui> where they are placed on the <u>. (In <ui> without <y>, all diacritics are placed on the <i>.)

Rimes with /r/

Transcription of /r/
-/r/ -/ir/ -/ur/ -/ər/ -/ar/ -/lr/ -/ŋr/
/i/- /ir/
<ue>
/iir/
<ue>
/iur/
<yor, ior>
/iər/
<yer, ier>
/iar/
<yar, iar>
/ilr/
<irl>
/iŋr/
<irn>
/u/- /ur/
<or>
/uir/
<yue, iue>
/uur/
<or>
/uər/
<wer, uer>
/uar/
<war, uar>
/ulr/
<url>
/uŋr/
<urn>
/ə/- /ər/
<er>
/əir/
<ue>
/əur/
<or>
/əər/
<er>
/əar/
<aer>
/əlr/
<erl>
/əŋr/
<ern>
/a/- /ar/
<ar>
/air/
<er>
/aur/
<er>
/aər/
<aer>
/aar/
<ar>
/alr/
<arl>
/aŋr/
<arn>
/l/- /lr/
<rl>
/lir/
<lue>
/lur/
<lor>
/lər/
<ler>
/lar/
<lar>
/llr/
<rl>
/lŋr/
<lrn>
/ŋ/- /ŋr/
<rn>
/ŋir/
<nue, mue>
/ŋur/
<nor, mor>
/ŋər/
<ner, mer>
/ŋar/
<nar, mar>
/ŋlr/
<nrl, mrl, ngrl>
/ŋŋr/
<rn>

Like in the previous table, spellings that are only found word-initially (in syllables without onset) are marked with blue.
Since there are in some cases tonal differences between /Nr/ and /NNr/, these syllables must be marked with diacritics. The rimes in the above table that have a letter underlined will have a grave accent (ˋ) on that letter if the syllable begins with an unvoiced consonant. If the syllable is onsetless, breve (˘) is used instead. In the case of <ue, rl, rn>, the breve goes on the <u> or <r>. These syllables are unmarked if they begin with a voiced consonant, because in that case they are in complementary distribution with /ONr/ syllables.
The nasal is spelled according to it's realization. <m> is used if the syllable begins with an alveolar or velar consonant. The syllable /nŋlr/ [ŋ̍ːɭ] is spelled <nngrl>. In all other contexts, <n> is used.

Pitch accent in complementary distribution

Syllables of the type /ONN˩/ are in complementary distribution with syllables of the type /ONC/ when the last phoneme is /l/, or in some cases a nasal. For example [muŋ˩] (mountain) could be analyzed as either /muŋ̍˩/ or /muŋ̑/. Cases like this are spelled as if the last phoneme is a coda consonant and not a nucleus, because this avoids the use of diacritics. So the forementioned word is spelled <mung>, not *<mùng>.

Cyphering

Only the three (sometimes four) first letters are taken into account when cyphering from English to Inng. The rest of the letters are discarded. English Y is constantly counted as a vowel. Interpunctuation, such as dashes and apostrophes are discarded. Diacritics are also ingnored. Other special characters are turned into what they most resemble or sound like. For example Œ becomes OE, Ʒ becomes Z, and Þ become TH.
When it comes to compound words, the two words are cyphered separately and a dash is placed between them. So for example gooseberry becomes toó-peel, and high school becomes hohng-eom. It does not matter if the compound is written together or apart, with or without dash in English; they all become dashed in Inng.
Different parts of the word are cyphered with differently. There are four cypher tables. To simplify it: One that converts initial consonants, one that converts vowels, one that converts final consonants, and one that converts consonants in clusters. The words are converted into their phonemic form, and then they are spelled according to Inng's romanization.

English to Inng cyphering

The first three letter of the English word is taken, and the rest are discarded. If the English word was three or fewer letters long, then the Inng word will be unaccented. If the English word was at least four letters long, and the third letter is a vowel, then the word will have high tone accent if the fourth letter was one of c, f, h, k, p, q, s, t, x, and low tone accent if the fourth letter was one of a, b, d, e, g, i, j, l, m, n, o, r, u, v, w, y, z.

Letter sequence types
1st letter's cyphering table 2nd letter's cyphering table 3rd letter's cyphering table
V V
Vowel
CV CV
Initial
CV
Vowel
VC VC
Vowel
VC
Final
VV VV
Vowel
VV
Vowel
CCC CCC
Conversion
CCC
Conversion
CCC
Final
CCV* CCV
Initial
CCV
Conversion
CCV
Vowel
CVC CVC
Initial
CVC
Vowel
CVC
Final
CVV* CVV
Initial
CVV
Vowel
CVV
Vowel
VCC VCC
Vowel
VCC
Conversion
VCC
Final
VCV* VCV
Initial
VCV
Conversion
VCV
Vowel
VVC VVC
Vowel
VVC
Vowel
VVC
Final
VVV* VVV
Initial
VVV
Vowel
VVV
Vowel

The above table shows which of the letters in the word to be cyphered is cyphered according to which substitution table. The table depends on the letter's position in the sequence, and what type of sequence it is. The asterisk marks those types of words that will be accented. Dot below is used if the original word was exactly three letters long, and acute or grave accent if it was longer.
If for example the word eye is to be cyphered, this word would be of the type VVV, because Y always counts as a vowel. The first E would be substituted according to table Initial, and the other two letters would substituted according to table Vowel.

Initials: CV · CCV · CVC · CVV · VCV · VVV
English letter a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
Inng phoneme /ts/ /p(i)/ /k/ /ɡ(u)/ /ts/ /f/ /t/ /h/ /ts/ /k(ŋ)/ /t(a)/ /l/ /m/ /n/ /dz/ /p/ /ts/ /d/ /s/ /ɡ/ /dz/ /f(ə)/ /b/ /dz/ /dz/ /s(l)/

This table is generally used for the first letter in the sequence, if it is a consonant. The letter in parenthesis is included in CV and CCV sequences, and in CVC sequences unless the final letter is substituted with two phonemes.

Vowels: V · CV · VC · VV · CCV · CVC · CVV · VCC · VCV · VVC · VVV
English letter a e i o u y
Inng phoneme /a/ /i/ /ə/ /u/ /ŋ/ /l/

This table is generally used for vowels.

Conversion: CCC · CCV · VCC · VCV
English letter b c d f g h j k l m n p q r s t v w x z
Inng phoneme /u/ /a/ /i/ /l/ /a/ /ə/ /i/ /a/ /l/ /ŋ/ /ŋ/ /u/ /a/ /l/ /ə/ /i/ /ŋ/ /u/ /ə/ /ə/

This table converts consonants into vowels. It is generally used for resolving consonant clusters.

Finals: VC · CCC · CVC · VCC · VVC
English letter b c d f g h j k l m n p q r s t v w x z
Inng phoneme /(u)l/ /r/ /p/ /(i)n/ /(ə)ŋ/ /m/ /(i)l/ /(u)k/ /k/ /ts/ /n/ /(ŋ)p/ /(a)p/ /l/ /t/ /ŋ/ /(a)t/ /(l)m/ /(ŋ)k/ /(ə)r/

This table is used for the final letter, if it is a consonant. The letter in parenthesis is skipped in VCC and VVC types, but included in all other sequence types. This letter overrides the parenthesized letter that table Initial otherwise would add.

Grammar

Morphology

Inng has no affixation beside the genitive clitic, so this section explains th

Parts of speech

Nouns

Nouns in Inng have no gender or any kind of noun classes. Inng does not mark case in any way either.

Number

Number is seldom marked in Inng. But a noun can be pluralized by preceding it with the word nngz (number).

Genitives

Only accentless roots of the form (O)N(N) are marked with the genitive clitic. The clitic takes the form of the suffix -t when attaching to roots of the form (O)N and NN. When attached to roots of the form ONN, it is expressed as high pitch.