Éljansk

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Éljansk /eːʎənsk/ or Islander Norse is a heavily Gaelic-influenced West Norse language that developed in the medieval Kingdom of the Isles from the 9th century.

Background

Phonology and Orthography

Vowels

  Front Near- front Central Near- back Back
Close
 
i
u
e
o
(ə)
a
  Near-close
Close-mid
Mid
Open-mid
Near-open
Open

All vowels except /ə/ may be long or short; vowel length is phonemic and invariable. The obscure vowel /ə/ occurs only as an allophone of mid- and low vowels (i.e. /e, o, a/) in unstressed syllables.

There is only one diphthong, éi /ɛi̯/.

Consonants

Bilabial Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Guttural
Plosive p b t d c ɟ k g
Nasal m n ɲ (ŋ)
Fricative ɸ β θ ð ʃ s (x) ɣ h
Affricate t͡ʃ d͡ʒ
Approximant j
Lateral l ʎ
Rhotic r
  • /ŋ/ is an allophone of /n/ before /k, g/.
  • /x/ is an allophone of /ɣ/ before /t/.

Stress

Primary stress is always on the first syllable of the word.

Spelling

Until the 13th century, Éljansk was primarily written using the Younger Futhark runes, but a spelling system using the Roman alphabet was already in use. The standardised form of the alphabet consists of the following letters:

a b d e f g h i j k l m n o p r s t u v

The runic letters ð and þ continued to be used into the 15th century, but are replaced by the digraphs dh and th in the standard orthography. In addition to these letters, all vowels may take the acute accent (á, é, í, ó, ú) to symbolise long vowels, and the letters d, k, l, n, s, t occur with a cedilla (usually realised as a diacritical comma in digital text; e.g. ḑ, ķ, ļ, ņ, ș, ț) to symbolise palatal consonants.

Palatal Consonants

The consonants /t, d, k, g, l, n, s/ (written t, d, k, g, l, n and s) all have palatal variants: /t͡ʃ, d͡ʒ, c, ɟ, ʎ, ɲ, ʃ/. The method of writing these palatal sounds is dependent on the context:

  • before i or í, the sounds are always palatal and the unmarked forms of the letters are used, so that ti is always /t͡ʃi/ etc., e.g. dim "dim, dark" /d͡ʒim/, sidhan "since" /ʃiðən/.
  • before other vowels, the letters are followed by j, e.g. tjarn "pond" /t͡ʃarn/, ljú "lie" /ʎuː/.
  • before a consonant or word-finally, the sounds are marked with a diacritical comma, e.g. veņ "custom" /βeɲ/, driķ "drinking" /dric/. An exception is the letter g, which is usually written gj even at the end of a syllable, e.g. legj "lie down" /leɟ/.

Sound to Spelling Correspondence

a /a/
á /aː/
b /b/
d /d/
di
dj
/d͡ʒ/
e /e/
é /eː/
f /ɸ/
g /g/
gi
gj
/ɟ/
h /h/
i /i/
í /iː/
j /j/*
k /k/
ki
kj
ķ
/c/
l /l/
li
lj
ļ
/ʎ/
m /m/
o /o/
ó /oː/
p /p/
r /r/
s /s/
si
sj
ș
/ʃ/
t /t/
ti
tj
ț
/t͡ʃ/
u /u/
ú /uː/
v /β/


Morphology

Syntax

Vocabulary