Buerkaans: Difference between revisions

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===Stress===
===Stress & Phonotactics===


Stress generally falls on the root of a word, normally the first syllable, but this is subject to change if certain prefixes are added, which may transfer stress from the root to the prefix, or move primary stress, along with the root, to the second syllable.  Unstressed ''e'' is often reduced to [ə].
Stress generally falls on the root of a word, normally the first syllable, but this is subject to change if certain prefixes are added, which may transfer stress from the root to the prefix, or move primary stress, along with the root, to the second syllable.  Unstressed ''e'' is often reduced to [ə].
Buerkáns' word structure is either CVC, VC, or CV, where C stands for either a single consonant or a cluster of up to three consecutive consonants, and V stands for up to three vowels.  In some special cases there can be four-consonant clusters, but these are generally in archaic words and most have been simplified.


==Orthography==
==Orthography==

Revision as of 21:23, 19 February 2014

Buerkantch
Buerkáns
Pronunciation[[Help:IPA|buɛ̯ɾ'kaːns]]
Created by
Native speakersNo Census Data (2014)
Language codes
ISO 639-1bu
ISO 639-2bue
ISO 639-3bue
Buerkáns.png
De Huylands' flág

Background

Buerkáns is spoken in the fictitious country of De Huylands, known as such in English, even though the translation is literally The Highlands. I like to imagine De Huylands exists in the same world as Alska, where it would be known in Alska as Højlandene.

Buerkáns takes influences from Dutch/Afrikaans, English, and the Scandinavian Languages. I wanted to make something in between all three, with the primary vocabulary a mix of Dutch-Danish/Swedish-derived roots and grammar closer to a simpler version of German.

Phonology

Buerkáns has a large phonology, similar to that of Dutch or Afrikaans, mixed slightly with Danish. There is a large vowel inventory of 13 distinct vowel quantities and a typical Germanic consonant inventory with the exception of [d͡ʒ].

Vowels

Phonemes
Front Central Back
Closed i y u
Near-closed ɪ
Mid-closed e ø o
Mid-open ɛ ə ʌ ɔ
Near-open æ
Open a

Consonants

Phonemes Bilabial Labiodental Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Stop p b t d k g
Affricate d͡ʒ
Nasal m n ŋ
Fricative f v s z ʃ x h
Approximant ɾ j
Lateral approximant l ɫ

Stress & Phonotactics

Stress generally falls on the root of a word, normally the first syllable, but this is subject to change if certain prefixes are added, which may transfer stress from the root to the prefix, or move primary stress, along with the root, to the second syllable. Unstressed e is often reduced to [ə].

Buerkáns' word structure is either CVC, VC, or CV, where C stands for either a single consonant or a cluster of up to three consecutive consonants, and V stands for up to three vowels. In some special cases there can be four-consonant clusters, but these are generally in archaic words and most have been simplified.

Orthography

Morphology

Syntax