Verse:Mwail/Anbirese: Difference between revisions

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Reflecting the partially koineized origin of the language, Anbirese orthography is mostly based on dialects without ''dueum beopchik'' ('initial law', the Korean term for deletion of initial ''r'', and/or initial ''n'' before ''i'' or ''j''), a sound change due to [[Sfətsiv]] influence.  
Reflecting the partially koineized origin of the language, Anbirese orthography is mostly based on dialects without ''dueum beopchik'' ('initial law', the Korean term for deletion of initial ''r'', and/or initial ''n'' before ''i'' or ''j''), a sound change due to [[Sfətsiv]] influence.  


Dueum beopchik varies by dialect or accent: some just have ''r-'' = /n-/, some just have ''ni-'', ''nj-'' = /i-/, /j-/, and some have both (and initial ''r'' is deleted in ''rj-'' and ''ri-''). Some words have dueum beopchik even in dialects that do not normally have it, like ''i'' 'not' (from [[Tigol]] ''ní'').
Dueum beopchik varies by dialect or accent: Cualuavian Anbirese has dueum beopchik for both initial ''r'' and initial ''nj'', whereas Talman Anbirese only tends to have it for initial ''r''. Some words have dueum beopchik even in dialects that do not normally have it, like ''i'' 'not' (from [[Tigol]] ''ní'').


Dueum beopchik is usually ''not'' applied to loans from [[Häskä]], [[Windermere]] and other languages.
Dueum beopchik is usually ''not'' applied to loans from [[Häskä]], [[Windermere]] and other languages.