Khangaþyagon Vowels: Difference between revisions
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Note the qualitative as well as quantitative difference in the low vowels. | Note the qualitative as well as quantitative difference in the low vowels. | ||
=== | ===Diphthongs=== | ||
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Fairly rare sounds. All diphtongs are falling. | Fairly rare sounds. All diphtongs are falling. | ||
===Tense/lax | ===Tense/lax Distinction=== | ||
This is not phonemic in Khangaþyagon, so for example [i] and [ɪ] will be recognised as the same phoneme. Technically it's a free variation, although tense forms are more usual in careful speech. The emergence of allophonic and phonemic tense/lax distinctions in dialects was one of the mechanisms by which different languages diverged from Khangaþyagon. | This is not phonemic in Khangaþyagon, so for example [i] and [ɪ] will be recognised as the same phoneme. Technically it's a free variation, although tense forms are more usual in careful speech. The emergence of allophonic and phonemic tense/lax distinctions in dialects was one of the mechanisms by which different languages diverged from Khangaþyagon. |
Revision as of 07:14, 18 May 2006
Khangaþyagon has five short vowels, five long vowels, and five permissible diphthongs. These are shown in the tables below first as IPA, then with the romanisation below them.
Short Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | i | u | |
i | u | ||
Mid | e | o | |
e | o | ||
Low | æ | ||
a |
Short vowels are generally more common than long vowels.
Long Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | iː | uː | |
ī | ū | ||
Mid | eː | oː | |
ē | ō | ||
Low | aː | ||
ā |
Most the stuff I've written online has the macrons missed off, as they're difficult to type.
Note the qualitative as well as quantitative difference in the low vowels.
Diphthongs
ae | au | eu | oæ | oe |
æ | au | eu | oa | œ |
Fairly rare sounds. All diphtongs are falling.
Tense/lax Distinction
This is not phonemic in Khangaþyagon, so for example [i] and [ɪ] will be recognised as the same phoneme. Technically it's a free variation, although tense forms are more usual in careful speech. The emergence of allophonic and phonemic tense/lax distinctions in dialects was one of the mechanisms by which different languages diverged from Khangaþyagon.
Schwa
[ə] never occurs in Khangaþyagon.
Back : Consonants Up : Phonology and Script Next : Phonotactics and Stress
--PeteBleackley 08:09, 18 May 2006 (PDT)