User:IlL/Spare pages 1/53
English in the AETHER timeline is an Indo-European language and has pretty much the same vocabulary and grammar as our English, but is a Riphic language, not a Germanic one. It is native to our Germany and Poland area, not the British Isles.
Etymologies
- leitmotif: an opera which used a leitmotif for a character named Lait or Light? (it was an operatic version of Death Note)
- karma: a non-Earth Indo-Aryan language
- mana: from an IA word for 'mind'
- Parmesan: unknown. A folk etymology derives it from a Cubrite woman's name (Parm Ezan?).
- frequentative -le from h2el- (cf Hebrew "halakh ve-VERB" = keeps VERB-ing)
- German linguistic terminology: invented by Edna? The standard terms are:
- affection not umlaut
- apophony not ablaut
- linguistic area not sprachbund
- lexical aspect not aktionsart
- case stacking not suffixaufnahme
- place of origin not urheimat
Orthography
In-universe, English has a Latin-based deep orthography reflecting different diachronics. By translation convention, this is rendered as our written English but with American and British spellings in free variation.
Accents
Overview
Vowels | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Feature | Standard Federation | Welvington | Standard European | Polish |
KIT | ɪ~ɪ̈ | ɪ | ɪ | i |
DRESS | ɛ | ɛ | ɛ | ɛ |
TRAP | a | æ; eə (before /m n/ in a closed syllable) | a | a |
BATH (the BATH lexical set is same as RP) | a | eə; aunt is pronounced /a:nt/ | a | a |
LOT | ɔ~ɒ | ɑ~ɒ | ɑ | ɔ |
STRUT | ɜ̟~ɐ | ʌ~ɤ | ʊ | ə |
FOOT | ʊ̈~ɘ | ʊ~ʏ | ʊ | i |
FLEECE | iː | ɪj; iʝ (reinforced) | iː | iː |
FACE | eɪ | ɛɪ; ɪj (reinforced) | eɪ | eː~ej |
PRICE | ɑɪ | ɑɪ, ʌɪ (reinforced) | əɪ | aː |
CHOICE | oɪ | oɪ, ʊɪ (reinforced) | ɒɪ | ɔj |
MOUTH | æʊ | ɶ̝ː~œː | ɑʊ | oː~ou |
GOAT | oʊ, ɔʊ~ɒʊ before [ɫ] | ɛʊ~əʊ, oʊ before [ɫ] | ø: | ɔj |
GOOSE | üw, uː before [ɫ] | üw, uː before [ɫ] | y: | iː |
PALM | ɑː | ä(ɹ)~a(ɹ) | aː | aː |
THOUGHT | ɔː~ɒː | oə(ɹ) | ɒː | uː |
NEAR | ɪɚ | iə(ɹ) | iɚ | iʀ |
SQUARE | ɛɚ | eə(ɹ) | eɚ | ejʀ |
NURSE | ɚː | əː(ɹ)~ɜː(ɹ) | ɚ | ɛʀ, iʀ, əʀ based on etymology |
START | ɑɚ | äː(ɹ)~aː(ɹ) | aɚ~äɚ | aʀ |
NORTH | oɚ | oə(ɹ) | ɔɚ | ɔʀ |
FORCE | oɚ | oə(ɹ) | œɚ | ɔjʀ |
POOR | uɚ | oə(ɹ) | uɚ | uʀ |
CURE | juɚ~jɚː | jəː(ɹ)~jɜː(ɹ)~joə(ɹ) | juɚ | juʀ |
commA | ə | ə(ɹ) | ə | ə |
lettER | ɚ | ə(ɹ) | ɚ | əʀ |
happY | iː~ɪj | i | i | i |
Other phenomena | ||||
Feature | Standard Federation | Welvington | Standard European | Polish |
Rhoticity | Fully rhotic | Nonrhotic with intrusive R | Fully rhotic with postalveolar and retroflex R | Uvular R, no fern-fir-fur merger |
Dark L | Only when non-prevocalic; vocalized L is [w] | Always; vocalized L is a uvular approximant | Never | Never |
/θ ð/ | [θ ð] | Often [t̪ d̪] | As in Irish English | Retracted slit fricatives [ʂ ʐ] |
Aspiration of voiceless stops and t/d-tapping | As in AmE | As in AmE | As in BrE | Never |
Reinforcement | None | Philly-reinforcement before voiceless consonants | None | None |
Welvington
The city name is pronounced "Wungton" [wʌŋʔn̩] by locals; it's nicknamed the "Womb of the Nation [Federation]"
Philly + Boston; should inspire Shalaian and Netagin. Should be RP in ways that the Standard accent is not
- MOUTH is monophthongized to [ɶ̝ː], sometiems with a MOUTH-START merger to /aː~æː/.
- -ing becomes -in'; th-stopping to [t̪] and [d̪]
- (Ph) Philly L (pharyngealized nasalized uvular approximant)
- (~Ph, ~RP) Philly-style reinforcement before voiceless consonants; i.e. generalized Canadain-raising-esque effects
- When the consonant is voiceless, the nucleus is shortened consonant is lengthened: face [fɪjsˑ]
- Otherwise this does not happen: fame [fɛˑɪm]
- (B, RP) non-rhotic
- (Ph, B, RP) Few or no mergers before prevocalic /r/
- (Ph, ~B, ~RP) Philly short-A system; lax A = [æ], tense A = [eə~ɛə]
- (Ph, RP) GOAT = [əʊ]; GOOSE = [üw]ː
- (~Ph, ~RP) LOT = [ɑ], THOUGHT = NORTH = FORCE = POOR = [oə~ɔə]
- (B, ~RP) START = [ä]
- SQUARE (= tense A) = [eə~ɛə]
- NEAR = [iə~ɪə]
- NURSE = [ə:]
- wine-whine merger (optional in Standard)
- A 3-way distinction of Mary [meəɹi], merry [mɛɹi~mɤɹi], marry [mæɹi], unlike Standard English
- hurry [hɤɹi], furry [fəːɹi]
- orange [ɑɹɪndʒ]
- mirror [mɪɹə(ɹ)] != nearer [niəɹə(ɹ)]
- /iːg/ > /ɪg/, /eɪg/ > /ɛg/ in many words
- /θ ð/ are commonly [t̪ d̪].
Sample (Broad Welvington)
oəʟ hjüwmən bɪjɪnz ə boən fɹɪj ən iʝkˑwəʟ ɪn dɪgnɪɾɪj ən ɹʌɪʔˑs. d̪eɪ əɹ ɪndœːd wɪd ɹɪjzn ən kɒnʃns, ən ʃəd ækt toədz wɤn ənɤd̪əɹ ɪn ə spɪɹɪɾ əv bɾɤd̪əhəd.
pliʝˑs koəʟ stɛʟə. eəsk ə ɾə bɹɪŋ d̪is t̪ɪŋz wɪd̪ ə fɹəm d̪ə stoə. sɪks spüwnz əf fɹɛʃˑ snəʊ pɪjz, fɑɪf t̪ɪkˑ sʟæbz əv blüw tʃɪjz, ən mɛɪbɪj ə snæk fəɹ ə bɹʌðə bɑˑb. wɪj oəʟsə nɪjɾ ə smoəʟ pʟæstɪk snɪjkˑ ən ə bɪg toɪ fɹoəg fə d̪ə kɪdz. ʃi kən sküwpˑ d̪is t̪ɪŋz ɪɾ̃ə t̪ɾɪj ɹɛd bægz, ən wiʟ gə miʝɾ ə wɛnsdɛɪ æʔ t̪ə tɹɛɪn stɪjʃˑən.
Sample (Cultivated Welvington)
oːɫ hjüwmən bɪjɪŋz ə boːn fɹɪj ən iʝkˑwəl ɪn dɪgnɪɾɪj ən ɹɑɪʔˑs. ðeɪ əɹ ɪndæʊd wɪð ɹɪjzn ən kɒnʃns, ən ʃəd æk toːdz wɜn ənɜðəɹ ɪn ə spɪɹɪɾ əv bɾɜðəhəd.
plɪjs koːʟ stɛlə. ask ə ɾə bɹɪŋ ðɪjs θɪŋz wɪð ə fɹəm ðə stoː. sɪks spüwnz əf fɹɛʃˑ snəʊ pɪjz, fɑɪf θɪkˑ slæbz əv blüw tʃɪjz, ən mɛɪbɪj ə snæk fəɹ ə bɹʌðə bɒb. wɪj oːɫsə nɪjɾ ə smoːɫ plæstɪk snɪjkˑ ən ə bɪg toɪ fɹɒg fə ðə kɪdz. ʃi kən sküwp ðɪjs θɪŋz ɪɾ̃ə θɾɪj ɹɛd bɛɪgz, ən wiʟ gə miʝɾ ə wɛnsdɛɪ æʔ θə tɹɛɪn stɪjʃˑən.
Standard Federation (North American)
A kind of "Transatlantic accent", inspired by Californian + Philadelphia + Modern RP/Estuary.
Intonation is mostly American + my own weird intonation
Vocab
Mostly like our American English, with a limited number of Britishisms: knackered, mental, bollocks, bugger, fancy, ... the ones I sorta-know how to use
Vowels
- orange = [oːɹəndʒ]
- Mary-merry-marry merger
- Mirror-nearer merger
- Hurry-furry merger
- No mergers before /l/
- No trap-bath split
- No yod-coalescence
Consonants
- L is light [l] before vowels and dark [ɫ] otherwise, as in RP.
- wholly-holy split.
- No glottal reinforcement before stops.
- /p t k/ are unaspirated after stressed syllables as in AmE.
- /d t/ has a tapped [ɾ] allophone in similar environments as in American English.
- wine-whine merger present.
- /r/ may be [ʋ] between vowels.
Standard European
The classical singing accent for English is based on Standard European English, with r always trilled [r] and l always clear [l]. The wine-whine merger is absent.
horse = [hɔɹs], hoarse = [hœɹs~hɜɹs]
Much more dialectal diversity in Switzerland and Bavaria (like in our German; they are sometimes considered separate languages)
Polish
"Poylish"
Sample
uːl hiːmn biːnz əʀ bɔʀn fʀiː ən iːkwəl in digniti ən ʀaːts. ʐej aʀ indoud wid ʀiːzn ən kɔnʃns ən ʃəd akt toʀdz wən ənəʐəʀ in ə spiʀit əv bʀəʐəhəd
pliːs kuːl stɛlə. ask əʀ tə bʀiŋg ʐis ʂɪŋgz wɪʐ ə fʀəm ʐə stɔjʀ. siks spiːnz əf fʀɛʃ snoj piːz, faːf ʂik sʟabz əv bliː tʃiːz, ən mejbi ə snak fəʀ əʀ bʀəʐə bɔb. wiː uːlsɔj niːd ə smuːl plastik sneːk ən ə big tɔj fʀɔg fəʀ ʐə kidz. ʃi kn skiːp ʐis ʂɪŋgz intə ʂʀiː ʀɛd bagz, ən wiːl gɔj miːt əʀ wɛnzdej at ʂə tʀeːn steːʃn.