Introduction
Sounds
Consonants
| b |
/b/ |
as in 'bee'
|
| p |
/p/ |
as in 'pea'
|
| d |
/d/ |
as in 'deed'
|
| t |
/t/ |
as in 'tea'
|
| g |
/g/ |
as in 'get'
|
| k |
/k/ |
as in 'key'
|
| f |
/f/ |
as in 'fee'
|
| th |
/θ/ |
as in 'thin'
|
| s |
/s/ |
as in 'see'
|
| z |
/z/ |
as in 'zed'
|
| sh |
/ʃ/ |
as in 'she'
|
| kh |
/x/ |
as ch in German 'Bach'
|
| h |
/h/ |
as in 'he'
|
| ch |
/t͡ʃ/ |
as in 'cheek'
|
| m |
/m/ |
as in 'me'
|
| n |
/n/ |
as in 'need'
|
| ng |
/ŋ/ |
as in 'ring'
|
| l |
/l/ |
as in 'leaf'
|
| r |
/ɹ/ |
as in 'reed'
|
| w |
/w/ |
as in 'we'
|
| y |
/j/ |
as in 'yea'
|
Consonant Blends and Clusters
Several of the sounds have a 'blended' version. A consonant blend is two consonants in a row pronounced one after the other. Most of these blends only appear at the beginning of syllables. While these blends are represented by a single letter in Brooding orthography, they are two consonant sounds (and this subject to Brooding word structure rules that apply to two consonants in a row).
| br |
/bɹ/ |
as in 'bread'
|
| pl |
/pl/ |
as in 'plea'
|
| dr |
/dɹ/ |
as in 'drum'
|
| tl |
/tl/ |
not an English sound. t followed immediately by l
|
| gr |
/gɹ/ |
as in 'grow'
|
| kl |
/kl/ |
as cl in 'clean'
|
| fl |
/fl/ |
as in 'flee'
|
| thl |
/θl/ |
not an English sound. It sounds a lot like sl as said with a lisp.
|
| sl |
/sl/ |
as in 'sleep'
|
| zr |
/zɹ/ |
not an English sound. z followed immediately by r
|
| shl |
/ʃl/ |
as schl in 'schlep'
|
| khl |
/xl/ |
not an English sound. x followed immediately by l
|
| hl |
/hl/ |
not an English sound. h followed immediately by l
|
| sk |
/sk/ |
as in 'skill'
|
| sp |
/sp/ |
as in 'spill'
|
| st |
/st/ |
as in 'still'
|
Vowels
Contrasting Vowels
General Structure
Nouns
Number
Case
Modifying Nouns
Denominalization
Pronouns
Prepositions
Verbs
Adjectives
Adverbs
Predicates
Conjunctions
Commands and Questions
Comparatives
Degree Adjectives
Numbers