Lees'hin
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Introduction
Lees'hin (lees'hin s'hon) is lees'hinian language spoken in Democratic Republic of Lees'hinia (Vas’hat Nhelhuk Lees’hin) by 48 000 native speakers. It was created in 2015. The language has no cognate with natural languages. I want to make some very strange language with strange vocubalary. And I made it, Lees'hin was my strange language. Also Lees'hin is intelligable with 2 other lees'hinian languages. They are Mihrulen and Basti.
Phonology
Orthography
Lees'hin orthography is special, because every letter except y has version with the letter h. For digraphs ch, sh, nh, lh and jh , version with h is c'h s'h, n'h, l'h and j'h.
Letter | Name of letter |
---|---|
a | akú |
ã | a kamã |
á | a acún |
b | bãh |
bh | abhú |
c | ca |
ch | cha |
c'h | ac'ha |
d | da |
dh | adhe |
e | ekú |
é | e acún |
f | fa |
fh | efhe |
g | gu |
gh | aghe |
h | hu |
i | ikú |
í | i acún |
j | ja |
jh | jhe |
j'h | aj'he |
k | kã |
kh | akhã |
l | la |
lh | lha |
l'h | al'he |
m | ma |
mh | amhe |
n | ne |
nh | nhe |
n'h | an'he |
o | okú |
õ | o kamã |
ó | o acún |
p | pu |
ph | aphú |
q | qu |
qh | aqhú |
r | ra |
rh | arha |
s | se |
sh | she |
s'h | as'hé |
t | tan |
th | athan |
u | ukú |
ú | u acún |
v | vãku |
vh | vhãku |
y | yun |
z | za |
zh | azha |
Consonants
Bilabial | Labio-dental | Alveolar | Post-alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | nh /ɲ/ | |||||
Plosive | p /p/ b /b/ | t /t/ d /d/ | k /k/ g /g/ | q /q/ | ||||
Affricate | c /t͡s/ | ch /t͡ʃ/ jh /d͡ʒ/ | ||||||
Fricative | f /f/ v /v/ | s /s/ z /z/ | sh /ʃ/ j /ʒ/ | *(')h /x/ | h /h/ | |||
Approximant | y /j/ | |||||||
Trill | r /r/ | |||||||
Lateral app. | l /l/ | lh /ʎ/ |
- (')h- when h is after consonant it will be pronounced /x/. So in writing exists 2 groups. One is with apostrophe and other has no apostrophe. Group with apostrophe is: s'h, c'h, j'h, l'h and n'h. In other group are consonants that don't need an apostrophe because they can't make another sound. So s'h is written this way to avoid mixing with sh. But gh is written in this way becaus e g with h can't make another phoneme, like sh.
Vowels
Front | Near-front | Central | Near-back | Back |
---|---|---|---|---|
Close | i, í /i/ | u, ú /u/ | ||
Close-mid | e, é /e/ | õ /ɤ/ , o, ó /o/ | ||
Mid | ã /ə/ | |||
Open | a, á /a/ |