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Revision as of 00:24, 13 February 2016
Introduction
Covalent Greek is a language inspired by Greek, Hmoob, chemical names and IlL's Clofabosin.
Phonology
The phonemes are as follows:
Labial | Dental | Retroflex | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unaspirated plosive | p /p/ | t /t/ | r /ʈ/ | c /k/ | k /q/ | |
Aspirated plosive | ph /pʰ/ | th /tʰ/ | rh /ʈʰ/ | ch /kʰ/ | ||
Voiced plosive | b /b/ | d /d/ | g /g/ | |||
Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | ||||
Lateral | l /l/ | |||||
Lateral fricative | ll /ɬ ~ ɬ̢/ | |||||
Fricative | f /f/ | x /s/ | s /ʂ/ | h /h/ | ||
Voiced fricative | v /v/ | z /z/ |
Front | Front rounded | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | i /i/ | u /y/ | |
Mid | e /e/ | y /ø/ | o /o/ |
Low | a /ɶ/ |
Phonotactics
M-Clofabylin phonotactics are really simple: monosyllables may be CV or (if not glottalized) CVC. Disyllables are CVCV or, again if not glottalized, CVCVC.
So for example "zu-mâb" and "zu-mä" are allowed but "zu-mäb" isn't.
Syllables may also begin with consonant clusters though only some clusters are allowed [list].