User:PrySigneToFlyeor/Sandbox/Sunnask
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Sunnask, literally meaning 'the language that comes from the sun,' is an experimental Germanic natural language created by PrySigneToFlyeor, intended to explore the most essential characteristics of the Germanic language family.
Orthography and Phonology
Alphabet Table
| Aa | Áá | Bb | Cc | Dd | Ðð | Ee | Éé |
| Ff | Gg | Hh | Ii | Íí | Jj | Kk | Ll |
| Mm | Nn | Oo | Óó | Pp | Rr | Ss | Tt |
| Þþ | Uu | Úú | Vv | Ww | Yy | Ýý | Zz |
| Ææ | Øø | Åå | Xx |
Among them, the letters in bold are limited to loanwords.
The pronunciation of letters (IPA values) is usually the letters themselves. The acute accent indicates a long vowel, and a length mark is added after its corresponding IPA value. The phonetic values of the following letters are relatively special: Þþ (thorn) do not appear in the IPA, so their phonetic values should be the same as the Greek letters Θθ. The phonetic value of Cc and Qq is /k/. The phonetic value of Xx is /ks/. The phonetic value of Åå is /ɔ/.
Phonology Rules
- Length contrast: The length of vowels is distinctive, e.g., man (man) vs. mán (moon).
- Consonant voicing: Voiceless stops /p, t, k/ are unaspirated; word-final devoicing occurs (though spelling is retained): góð /goːθ/ (good).
- Stress: Primary stress is usually on the first syllable (root); in compounds, the first element has primary stress, with subsequent secondary stress.
- Products of Grimm's Law: PIE p t k → f þ h is preserved, e.g., fóð (foot), þak (roof), hann (he).
Nouns
Nouns are divided into masculine, feminine, neuter, singular, plural, nominative, dative, genitive, and accusative cases.
Strong Declension
Using 'wolf', 'book', and 'boat' as examples, the following are the strong declension rules for nouns:
| Case | Masculine Singular | Masculine Plural | Feminine Singular | Feminine Plural | Neuter Singular | Neuter Plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominative | wulf | wulfaz | bōk | bōkiz | skip | skipu |
| Genitive | wulfis | wulfǭ | bōkis | bōkǭ | skipis | skipǭ |
| Dative | wulfa | wulfum | bōka | bōkum | skipa | skipum |
| Accusative | wulfan | wulfanz | bōk | bōkiz | skip | skipu |
Weak Declension
Using 'man', 'tongue', and 'heart' as examples, the table below shows the rules of weak declension for nouns:
| Case | Masculine Singular | Masculine Plural | Feminine Singular | Feminine Plural | Neuter Singular | Neuter Plural |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominative | guma | gumans | tungō | tungōns | herta | hertans |
| Genitive | gumins | gumanǭ | tungōns | tungōnǭ | hertins | hertanǭ |
| Dative | gumin | gumum | tungōn | tungōm | hertin | hertum |
| Accusative | guman | gumans | tungōn | tungōns | herta | hertans |