SamSkandinavisk: Difference between revisions

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===Phonology===
===Phonology===
Samska’s phonology resembles its natural Scandinavian source languages – it is particularly close to Norwegian and Swedish. It has a large number of vowels which have long and short distinction. Consonants also have a long-short distinction. Consonant length and vowel length have complimentary relationship. Short vowels are followed by long consonants, long vowels are followed by short consonants.
Samska’s phonology resembles its natural Scandinavian source languages – it is particularly close to Norwegian and Swedish. It has a large number of vowels which have a long and short distinction. Consonants also have a long-short distinction. Consonant length and vowel length have complimentary relationship. Short vowels are followed by long consonants, long vowels are followed by short consonants.
 
Because SamSka is an auxiliary language, a range of pronunciations are accepted and some phonemes have alternative forms.


Many consonants have been subject to palatization when before a frontal vowel. For example '''sk-''' is normally /sk/ but before '''e, i, y, ä''' and '''ö''' it is /ʃ/. This means that related words may have quite different consonants. This can even be the case with the inflections of a word - if the vowel changes due to an inflection, then the consonant may be palatized as a result. In the case of the '''G''' consonant, when at the end of word it will be pronounced as /g/. But adding a suffix such as '''-en''' will change the pronunciation to /j/. For example '''dag''' /dɑːg/ > '''dagen''' /ˈdɑːjən/.
Many consonants have been subject to palatization when before a frontal vowel. For example '''sk-''' is normally /sk/ but before '''e, i, y, ä''' and '''ö''' it is /ʃ/. This means that related words may have quite different consonants. This can even be the case with the inflections of a word - if the vowel changes due to an inflection, then the consonant may be palatized as a result. In the case of the '''G''' consonant, when at the end of word it will be pronounced as /g/. But adding a suffix such as '''-en''' will change the pronunciation to /j/. For example '''dag''' /dɑːg/ > '''dagen''' /ˈdɑːjən/.
Some phonemes have allophones that are quite far from the phonemic pronunciation. For example '''V''' after a vowel, at the end of a word can be pronounced as /ʋ/ or even as the vowel /ʊ/. For example '''brav''' (good, great) can be pronounced /brɑːv/, /brɑːʋ/ or /brɑːʊ/. Clusters of '''r''' followed by a dental consonant such as '''d, t, n, l, s''' merge to form the retroflex consonants /ɖ/, /ʈ/, /ɳ/, /ɭ/, /ʂ/.


== Sample Texts ==
== Sample Texts ==
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