User:Praimhín/Old Irish-Semitic inspired conlang
Séd (sayd; natively Séd-ŋó /s(ʲ)eːd(ʲ) ŋ(ʲ)oː/ 'Séd language'; in Xxánzzí /χɑːnˠzˠiː/, or Chinese characters: Séd-語) is a Sino-Xenic language spoken to the north of the Korean peninsula. It's inspired by Irish, Arabic and Farsi.
Stress: first long vowel, if no long vowel then initial
Middle Chinese -t > -r/-rr
No initial clusters
Todo
mansé? manssé? = "long live", "hurrah!"
Sino numbers: laŋ, ir, njí, ssám, ssí, ŋŋó, lúk, sir, ffér, kú, djif, djifir, djifnjí, djifssám, djifssí, djifŋŋó, ... (djifssám, djifssí often become djiffám, djiffí)
Hánkkuk = Korea
Tjúŋkkuk = China
Njirffun = Japan
Yurnnam = Vietnam
Lláŋyé = Rangya
Phonology
Orthography
Sino orthography
Séd is written in a mixture of native, phonetic characters (in which each character represents one morpheme and encodes the phonetics) and Xxánzzí, or Chinese characters, for Sinoxenic loans.
Rrómazzí
Sample texts
ttúŋttaŋ or béŋttaŋ = equal
UDHR
Kkúff njínkaná fallayárr bbásjélla djíyúsjarratán ssunŋémitji ginlíxxa tjurdih ttúŋttaŋsjarrah. Njínkaná lisjaŋitji láŋsimé daxxttóbatán, ózzáhigid xéŋdéáyurr saŋzínúl haŋddúŋkadaxs djakkah.
One accent: [ku:ʍ ɳi:ɲcɛnʲæ: fʲɛɫɔja:rˠ ba:ʂə:ɫɑ ɖʐɨ:jʉ:ʂɜɾˠɑ:n sˠʊnɲe:mʲɪʈʂʊ ɟɪnʲlʲi:χ:ɔ ʈʂʊrʲdʲɪh tˠu:ŋtˠɔŋʂɜɾˠɔh]