Northeadish: Difference between revisions

m
Line 188: Line 188:
| a || b || d || ð || e,ə || f || g || h,x || iː
| a || b || d || ð || e,ə || f || g || h,x || iː
|-
|-
| ''jot'' || ''ké'' || ''el'' || ''em'' || ''en'' || ''o'' || ''pé'' || ''er'' || ''es''
| ''jot'' || ''ké'' || ''el'' || ''em'' || ''en'' || ''ó'' || ''pé'' || ''er'' || ''es''
|-
|-
| '''Jj''' || '''Kk''' || '''Ll''' || '''Mm''' || '''Nn''' || '''Oo''' || '''Pp''' || '''Rr''' || '''Ss'''
| '''Jj''' || '''Kk''' || '''Ll''' || '''Mm''' || '''Nn''' || '''Oo''' || '''Pp''' || '''Rr''' || '''Ss'''
|-
|-
| j || k || l || m || n || || p || r || s
| j || k || l || m || n || ɔ || p || r || s
|-
|-
| ''té'' || ''ú'' || ''vé'' || ''wo'' || ''ý'' || ''azet'' || ''þé'' || ''å'' || ''ø''
| ''té'' || ''ú'' || ''vé'' || ''wo'' || ''ý'' || ''azet'' || ''þé'' || ''å'' || ''ø''
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| '''Tt''' || '''Uu''' || '''Vv''' || '''Ww''' || '''Yy''' || '''Zz''' || '''Þþ''' || '''Åå''' || '''Øø'''
| '''Tt''' || '''Uu''' || '''Vv''' || '''Ww''' || '''Yy''' || '''Zz''' || '''Þþ''' || '''Åå''' || '''Øø'''
|-
|-
| t || ʊ || v || w || ʏ || z || θ || ɔ(ː) || øː
| t || ʊ || v || w || ʏ || z || θ || ɔː || øː
|}
|}


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| ɑː || eː || ɫ̩ || m̩|| n̩|| ŋ̩|| r̩
| ɑː || eː || ɫ̩ || m̩|| n̩|| ŋ̩|| r̩
|-
|-
| '''ng''' || '''ngg''' || '''Úú''' || '''ugw''' || '''uhw''' || '''ukw''' || '''Ýý'''
| '''ng''' || '''Óó''' || '''Úú''' || '''ugw''' || '''uhw''' || '''ukw''' || '''Ýý'''
|-
|-
| ŋ|| ŋg|| uː|| ʊgw || ʊxw || ʊkw || yː
| ŋ|| || uː|| ʊgw || ʊxw || ʊkw || yː
|}
|}
[[File:Northeadish-reform.ogg|Northeadish Reform Alphabet]]
[[File:Northeadish-reform.ogg|Northeadish Reform Alphabet]]


The Reform Alphabet has many fewer letters than the Standard Literary Alphabet (twenty-seven as opposed to forty-four), and, alphabetically, long and short variants of vowels are considered the same letter. It follows the standard alphabetical order of other Germanic languages (that is, the standard Latin order, followed by thorn, a-ring, and o-slash). Unlike Icelandic, however, long vowels are not considered separate letters alphabetically.  Long vowels are indicated by an acute accent, as in Icelandic or Faroese; those long vowels which no longer have a short equivalent (i, o, and ø) are written without any diacritic.  
The Reform Alphabet has many fewer letters than the Standard Literary Alphabet (twenty-seven as opposed to forty-four), and, alphabetically, long and short variants of vowels are considered the same letter. It follows the standard alphabetical order of other Germanic languages (that is, the standard Latin order, followed by thorn, a-ring, and o-slash). Unlike Icelandic, however, long vowels are not considered separate letters alphabetically.  Long vowels are indicated by an acute accent, as in Icelandic or Faroese; those long vowels which no longer have a short equivalent (i, and ø) can be written without any diacritic.  


The names of the letters are standardized to Latin letters and are no longer associated with earlier runic names. All characters fall within the Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement Unicode character ranges.
The names of the letters are standardized to Latin letters and are no longer associated with earlier runic names. All characters fall within the Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement Unicode character ranges.