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= Phonology =
= Phonology & Orthography =


== Vowels ==
== Vowels ==


<a e i ø o>
{| class="wikitable"
|-
!                !! open !! ''open front'' !! mid !! close !! rounded !! ''front rounded'' !! neutral
|-
| '''Plain'''    || a ||  æ  || e || i || o ||  œ  || ø
|-
| '''Nasalized''' || ã ||  æ̃  || ẽ || ĩ || õ ||  œ̃  || ø̃
|-
| '''Long'''      || á ||  ǽ  || é || í || ó ||  œ́  || ǿ
|}


/ɑ ɛ i ə ʊ/
The letters <æ> & <œ> (and their variants) are only found in loanwords.


Short, Long, or (short) Nasalized
=== "Native" vowels ===


á é í ǿ ó - Long
The five "native" vowels are very large targets, having basically the following goal points:


ã ẽ ĩ ø̃ õ - Nasalized
* open /ɑ/


Additional vowels in loans: æ /a/, œ /ʏ/.
* mid /ɛ/


== Consonants ==
* close /i/
 
* rounded /ʊ/
 
* neutral /ə/
 
The open and rounded vowels tend to be backed, while the mid and close vowels tend to be fronted. The neutral vowel is a mid-central schwa, but can be fairly flexibly pronounced to provide disharmony with the preceding vowel.
 
=== "Foreign" vowels ===
 
Additionally, two explicitly-fronted vowels may be found in loanwords


b /b/
* front rounded (nominally /ʏ/)


g /ɡ/
* open front (nominally /a/)


gg /ŋ/
They are each only explicitly written as separate letters if they contrast with a non-front alternative within the same word (for which the native / "normal" letter is used).


gj /dʑ/
== Consonants ==


d /d/
{| class="wikitable
|-
!        !! Bilabial !! Labiodental !! Labiovelar !! Interdental !! Alveolar !! Postalveolar !! Palatal !! Velar  !! Uvular !! Glottal
|-
| Stop  || p b      ||            || ku gu      ||            || t d     ||              ||        || k g    || ck cg  || c
|-
| Nas    || hm m    ||            ||            ||            || hn n    ||              || hnj nj  || hgn gn ||        ||
|-
| Aff    ||          ||            ||            ||            ||          || tj dj        || kj gj  ||        ||        ||
|-
| Fric  ||          || ff f        || xxu xu    || þþ þ        || ss s    || ssj sj      || zz z    || xx x  ||        || h gh
|-
| Tap    ||          ||            ||            ||            || hr r    ||              ||        ||        ||        ||
|-
| Trill  ||          ||            ||            ||            || rr      ||              ||        ||        ||        ||
|-
| Liquid ||          ||            || hu u      ||            || hl l    ||              || hj j    ||        || hŕ ŕ  ||
|}


dj /dʒ/
Initial fricatives are voiceless, but are written with the otherwise-voiced (usually single-letter) form.


f /f/ ~ /v/
Voiceless liquids and nasals only occur in native words in initial position (they may occur in any position in loanwords).


h *
Older texts may be found using the ''punctum delens'' (a dot above or below a letter) to mark voiceless forms of consonants other than stops or fricatives.


j /j/
''Note:'' There is no voiceless <rr> and no voiced <c>


k /k/
== Syllable Structure ==


kj /tɕ/
All words consist of alternating consonants and vowels (in other words, all syllables are open, except the final syllable in a word, which may be closed). There are two exceptions:


l /l/ ~ /ɬ/
* A voiced homorganic nasal may occur before a stop intervocalically. In the case of the velar nasal, when it does so, it is written simply <n>.


m /m/
* Two (but no more than two) vowels may occur in sequence with no (apparent) consonant separating them


n /n/
There are complex sandhi rules to prevent grammatically-caused, otherwise-illegal vowel and consonant clusters.


p /p/
=== Sandhi ===


q /ʔ/ ~ /q/
''TBD''


r /ɾ/
=== Examples ===


rr /r/
Valid word shapes include:


s /s/ ~ /z/
* a


sj /ʃ/ ~ /ʒ/
* ack


t /t/
* apa


u /w/ ~ /ʍ/
* ti


x
* toeb


þ /θ/ ~ /ð/
* dinka


* The phonemics of <h> are complicated.
[[Category:Languages]]
[[Category:Conlangs]]