Whitmer
Shalaian is a language spoken in Crackfic Tricin. Most of its speakers are in Cualand and the Shalaian Autonomous Region of Dodellia.
Phonology
There are two main dialects of Shalaian, Dodellian Shalaian (which has more of an Egyptian Arabic aesthetic) and Cualand Shalaian (which has more of an Anglo-Fuṣḥā aesthetic).
Dodellian
/e æ ɑ o i: e: æ: ɑ: o: u://
Cualand
Vowels
The vowels are a subset of Received Pronunciation vowels.
Front | Central | Back | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
short | long | short | long | short | long | |
Close | i /ɪ/ "KIT" | ee /iː~ɪj/ "FLEECE" | oo /uː~üː/ "GOOSE" | |||
Mid | eer, iya, eeya /ɪə~eː/ "NEAR" | a, er /ə/ "lettER/commA" | oor, or, ōr, uwa /ɔː/ "POOR/FORCE" | |||
Open-mid | air, aia /ɛː/ "SQUARE" | er, ōwa /ɜː/ "NURSE" | o /ɒ/ "LOT" | |||
Open | a /æ/ "TRAP" | [ɐ] | aa, ar /ɑː/ "BATH/START" | |||
Diphthong | ai /ɛɪ/ "FACE" | ō /əʊ/ "GOAT" |
- Notes
- /ə/ occurred only in unstressed syllables. Adjacent to pharyngeals it is closer to [ɐ].
- It is common to use both etymological linking R and "intrusive" R [ɹ~ɾ] between /ɑː eː ɛː oː ɜː ə/ and a following vowel in a prosodic unit. For example: Għídna aj kisál't 'Edna and her dogs' is pronounced [ˈʕednə‿ɹətʃ kɪ'sæɫʔt].
- /ɒ/ is [ɔ] as in Modern RP. It is lowered to [ɒ] after /ʕ/.
- /ɔː/ is [oː] as in Modern RP.
- /æ/ is front [a] or [æ]. However it reduced to /ə/ in certain unstressed syllables.
- /ɪ/ may be [e~ɛ~ɛ̈] after /ʕ/.
- /ɜː/ may be [ɐː], especially after /ʕ/.
- /ɛɪ əʊ/ are normally [ɛɪ ə̟ʊ]. They are realized as [aɪ aʊ] after pharyngeals.
- Whitmer does not have vowel mergers before intervocalic R such as the Mary-marry merger and the mirror-nearer merger. For example, thárrad /'θæɹəd/ 'moon; month', tháirad /'θɛːɹəd/ 'you (sg.) fall', and thárad /'θɑːɹəd/ 'your (sg.) foot' are distinct.
Consonants
Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Postalveolar | Palatal | Velar | Pharyngeal | Glottal | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | labialized | |||||||||
Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | [ŋ] | |||||||
Plosive | voiceless | t /t/ | ch /tʃ/ | k /k/ | kw /kʷ/ | [ʡ] | ' /ʔ/ | |||
voiced | b /b/ | d /d/ | j /dʒ/ | |||||||
Fricative | f /f/ | th /θ/ | s /s/ | sh /ʃ/ | kh /x~χ/ | wh /xʷ/ | ħ /ħ/ | h /h/ | ||
Approximant | l /l/ | r /r/ | y /j/ | w /w/ | għ /ʕ/ |
- Notes
- Voiceless stops are usually aspirated, as in English.
- /ʔ/ is a phoneme unlike in RP: more syllable types can have glottal reinforcement. The glottal stop is placed after the last resonant (/m n l/ or a vowel) in the glottally reinforced syllable.
- /r/ may be [ɹʷ] or [ɾ]. It tends to be voiceless after voiceless consonants.
- /l/ is velarized [ɫ] when not before a vowel and clear [l] otherwise. The rule applies whether or not the following vowel comes in the next word.
- /n/ assimilates to [ŋ] before /k/ but not before /x xʷ/.
- /tʃ dʒ ʃ/ are labialized [tʃʷ dʒʷ ʃʷ], as in English.
- /kʷ xʷ/ can occur in coda, unlike /Cw/ combinations.
- /ʕ/ is a relatively weak approximant like the Sephardi Hebrew /ʕ/; it's not as strong as the Arabic /ʕ/. When less careful, postvocalic /ʕ/ may be nasalized [ʕ̃], the nasalization affecting adjacent vowels.
- The cluster /ʕʔ/ is realized as [ʡ].
- [p z] are found allophonically as allophones of /b s/. Otherwise /p z g/ are only used in loanwords from English and other languages.
Intonation
Cualand Shalaian has a characteristic intonation similar to Conservative RP:
- Before the stressed syllable: something like Arabic
- Declarative: start with high pitch on stressed syllable, steady fall to end
- Interrogative: dip and steady rise
- Dependent: high-falling with a dip-rise at the end.
Stress
Stress is phonemic. Primary stress is transcribed with an acute accent.
Vowel reduction
- /a/ and /ɜː/ reduce to [ə] in unstressed syllables.
Phonotactics
Underlyingly, Shalian roots have the structure CVC, CVCV, CVCC, CVCCV, CVCVC (and some CVCCVC and CVCCC?).
Shalian clusters are similar to Arabic but slightly more restrictive in the direction of Proto-Germanic and Latin.
Clusters in Shalian must obey a sonority hierarchy depending on their position; voicing assimilation is used to resolve clusters that violate it. Obstruent-obstruent clusters are subject to regressive voicing assimilation except that /sb sd ʃb ʃd/ > [zb zd ʒb ʒd]. Few initial clusters (only /Cj/, /Cw/ and /sC/) are allowed, and many non-English clusters are found within words such as /dm/ in għádma /ˈʕædmə/ 'happiness'. However, the most common clusters are ones found in English such as Cr and Cl clusters. Geminates and /rC/ clusters are not allowed within stems, which will be assumed below.
Within stems (assuming no syncope), the following 2-consonant clusters w/o /ʔ/ are allowed:
- mC: mn ml mr my mgħ mb md mzh mt mch mk mkw mth ms msh mkh mħ mh
- nC: nm nr ny ngħ nv nw nd nzh nt nch nk nkw nf nth ns nsh nkh nwh nħ nh
- lC: lm ln ly lgħ lv lw lb ld lzh lt lch lk lkw lf lth ls lsh lkh lwh lħ lh
- għC: għm għn għl għr għy (never initial) għw għv għb għd għzh għt għk għf għth għs għsh għkh għwh
- Cm: nm lm għm dm zhm tm chm km kwm thm sm shm khm ħm hm
- Cn: mn ln għn vn bn dn zhn tn chn kn kwn fn thn sn shn khn whn ħn hn
- Cl: ml għl vl bl dl zhl tl chl kl kwl fl thl sl shl khl whl ħl hl
- Cr: mr nr għr vr br dr zhr tr chr kr kwr fr thr sr shr khr whr ħr hr
- Cy: my ny għy (never initial) vy by dy ty ky fy thy sy khy ħy hy
- Cw: nw għw dw zhw tw chw thw sw shw ħw
- Cgħ: mgħ ngħ lgħ vgħ bgħ dgħ zhgħ tgħ chgħ kgħ fgħ thgħ sgħ shgħ khgħ whgħ
- XX: vd vzh bv bd bzh bt bk bs bwh bħ dv db zhv zhb zhd tf tk tkw tħ cht chk chf chs kt kch kf ks ksh kħ kwt kwch kwf kws kwsh ft fk fs fsh fħ thb [ðb] thk thf thħ sb [zb] sd [zd] st sk sf sħ sht shk shf shħ khf kht khs khsh wht whch whf whth whs whsh ħt ħch ħf ħs
Minimal pairs of glottal + stop final:
- chort = [tʃoʰt] 'to jump'
- chur't = [tʃoʔt] 'his blood'
- chord = [tʃoːd~tʃoːt] 'meaning'
Minimal pairs of glottal + fricative final:
- whais = [ʍɛɪs] 'flesh'
- whai's = [ʍɛɪʔs] 'to avoid'
Sound rules
- Prefixes sometimes cause syncope: C₁V-C₂ə- (second is open) > C₁VC₂-
- Example: li-ħachai-s > laħcháis 'I shall praise him/her (honorific)'
- Grassmann's law on prefixes?