Round Robin Conlang/Observations
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 | qʼ | |||
Voiceless | p | t | ts | k | q | ||
Voiced | b | d | ɡ | ||||
Nasals | m | n | ŋ | ||||
Fricatives | Voiceless | f | s | χ | h | ||
Voiced | v | ||||||
Liquid | l |
Presumed semivowel
/j/
Vowels /i e ɛ a ɔ o u/; /oi au/; 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.
Attested vowel clusters: /iɔ/
Attested vowel contractions: //ui// → /u/, //ɛi// → /e/, //ii// → /i/
Tone High and low. Low is unmarked. High tone remains in contractions, but in some proccesses of reduplication (not in verbal pluralization) the second of two is dissimilated to low.
Lenition
The following changes are attested:
Original | p | b | t | n | g | ŋ | q |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lenited | f | v | s | ð̃ | ɣ | ɣ̃ | 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, d, k → ṽ, z (ð? l??), x. /s, j/ appear to be unchanged under lenition as seen from gɔso, vijes. 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. /j/ becomes /ddz/ when geminated.
There is also prenasalization (apparently identical with gemination for nasals).
It appears that we have four grades of consonants, plain, lenited, geminated and prenasalised, realisations of which may overlap. Roots appear to contain only plain consonants. --PeteBleackley 17:00, 13 January 2010 (UTC)
Syllable structure
Thus far (C)V(N)(C) seems sufficient (maximal example: boimb). Only clusters of two consonants have been observed medially, generally limited to geminates and nasal + consonant (but see hóvhov. Might coda /v/ be [w]?)
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/, appear in any of the verb roots attested so far, and neither does /ɔ/. AlexFink