User:Juhhmi/Irbel

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Irbel /iɻ.vʲeʎ/ (or Westlang /ɚwəl/) is an a priori language isolate spoken in Lıutpaét /lʲʉspɘtʲ/ of Western Kingdoms of eastern Sword of Vortex.

Phonology

Consonants

There are twenty-? phonemically distinguished consonants since the palatalization process forms contrastive pairs.

Bilabial Labio-dental Alveolar Post-alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal n ɲ
Plosive p pʲ t tʲ c k ʔ
Fricative f fʲ v vʲ s ʒ ɕ ç x h
Approximant ɻ j
Trill r
Lateral approximant l lʲ ʎ

Affricates: /t͡ɕ/ and /d͡ʑ/

Coarticulated consonants: /w/, /ɥ/ and /ɧ/

  • According to the current Master of Spoken, Teakp Kwın /t͡ɕäxpʰ kuʉ̯ɲ/, sound /ɧ/ is realized as a combination of [f̞] [ʃ̞] and [ç] and educational facilities follow her advice when correcting dialectal variaties and attempting to teach the sound to foreigners.

Vowels

Monophthongs

Front Central Back
Close i y ɨ: ʉ u
Near-close ɪ
Close-mid e ø ɘ o
Mid ə
Near-open æ
Open ä ɑ

Diphthongs

Graphemes y and v in coda are used to form diphthongs ay /äɪ̯/, ey /ei̯/, av /ɑʊ̯/ and ev /øy̯/ which occur in both open and closed syllables (without or with coda).

  • Normally between vowels, y forms a long semi-vowel /j:/ and v is /w~ɥ/ so the diphthong nature has to be indicated by h after y or v: aya /ɑj:ä/ (child) vs. ayha /ɑʊ̯hɑ/ (to boil).
  • Grapheme w as a lone nucleus represents two diphthongs: word-initially wC or whV is /ou̯/ and word-medially /uʉ̯/.

Orthography

Palatalization

The language is written with a modified Westlang (Latin) alphabet script. Notable is the phonemic palatalization which naturally occurs in consonants before front vowels /e/ and /i/. Attempts to express the palatalization have accumulated into a complex system which was greatly simplified by Beate Lucuc /vʲätʲ lukux/ in year 521 of 7th era.

  • "Mute" front vowels which trigger palatalization: close ı used with u, and open e with a. Can be used word-finally to change the last coda consonant into palatalized: caoc /kɑkʰ/ (reign) vs. caec /kɑcʰ/ (cat).
  • "Mute" back vowel o occurs between vowels and non-palatalized or not fully spirantized coda: cac /kax/ (type of fir tree) vs. caoc /kakʰ/.
  • Pronounced front vowels: í and é. Use of u and a respectively with consonants, indicates that no palatilization occurs around í and é.
  • Vowels ı and e can be used in single-syllable words in place of pronounced í and é if there is no risk of confusion: céc = cec /ceç/ (long), but catéta /kɑt͡ɕetɑ/ (agree) ≠ cateta /kɑɕtɑ/ (beautiful).
  • Only two vowels are written in a same syllable. If palatalization of both onset and coda is required, both triggers are placed after the consonants: ceace /cäcʰ/ (shock). Notice, that the final palatal consonant is not spirantized as opposed to ateaf /ɑt͡ɕäç/ (sneeze, "achoo").
  • If a syllable has a front vowel as nucleus but both onset and coda not palatalized, h can be used to alter the coda instead of o: caétaét /ketetʲ/ (thousand) vs. caétaéht /ketetʰ/ (fever).

Consonants

Realization of different graphemes in a word, and * means that the grapheme is not used in the position with all .

Consonant pairs
Grapheme Plain Palatalized
Initial Before
consonants
Word-final Initial Before
consonants
Word-final
p p f
b v f f
n n * n ɲ * ɲ
t t s t͡ɕ ɕ
s s s s ɕ ɕ ɕ
r r r r ɻ ɻ ɻ
l l l l ʎ ʎ
c k x x c ç ç
x x * */x ç * *
g ks ʔs ks ɧ ç f
j j ʒ ʒ d͡ʑ ʑ ʑ
v w * * ɥ * *
  • After back vowels, c is not fully spirantized /ç/, but weakly aspirated /cʰ/. Ligatures f and k are /ç/ after a and u respectively.
  • Grapheme x /x/ comes word-finally only after front vowels.
  • Grapheme v is only used in codas after a and e to indicate the diphthongs /ɑʊ̯/ and /øy̯/.
Ligatures
Grapheme Phoneme Notes
q
d
f ç After a
k ç After u
m n: Between vowels
w w:/ɥ: Between back/front vowels
y j: Between vowels
  • Word-initial w before a back vowel is realized as /əw-/ and before front vowels as /əɥ-/. Word-initial y is similarly /əj-/ and m is /ən-/. In coda, y is used only after a and e for diphthongs /äɪ̯/ and /ei̯/ respectively

Vowels

Grapheme With consonants
not palatalized: palatalized:
a ɑ ä
u u ʉ
é ɘ e
í ɪ i
  • Glottal fricative /h/ separates pronounced vowels in pronunciation and is inserted if more than two vowels would line: cíu /cihu/ (flow) vs. cíhuıt /cihuɕ/ (imagine)
Ligatures
Grapheme Phoneme Notes
w ou̯/uʉ̯ word-initially/-medially
y ɨ:
  • When used as lone nuclei, they are non-palatalized and palatilization is indicated by ı. If followed by a vowel, h is placed after the grapheme: tyıp /tɨ:pʲ/ (settlement) vs. kyhíp /kɨ:hipʲ/ (pinnacle)

Digraphs

Examples of the use of e and ı with consonants.

Grapheme Phoneme Notes
c Before u
After u, e and i
ce c Before a
After a
oc Word-finally
ot After e and i
op After e and i
av ɑʊ̯ Before vowels: avh
ev øy̯
ay äɪ̯
ey ei̯
eu ø Stressed syllable,
considered as front vowel
ia æ Similarly to eu
  • All diphthongs are separated from vowels following them with h.

Examples: cıuq /cʉkɘ/ (sleeve), cíu /cihu/ (flow), cead /cäkɪ/ (neck), céa /cehɑ/ (mock)

Balancing

The construction of words according to previous orthographic rules is called Mages /ənɑɧeɕ/ or "balancing". How the vowels are distributed into words... Neutral forms; aesthetic variation in poems (word art with meaning-changing accents?)

Grammar

Syntax