Aeranir: Difference between revisions

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*The nasal consonant /n/ assimilates to the place of articulation of the following stop, so that /nkʰ/ or /nqʷʰ/ for example become /ŋkʰ/ and /ɴʷqʷʰ/.  Before fricatives, /n/ is deleted, and the proceeding vowel is lengthened and nasalised.  These processes apply between word boundries as well.  Word final /n/ as part of case and personal markers is elided before a word starting with a vowel, fricative, approximate, or before a [[w:Pausa|pausa]].
*The nasal consonant /n/ assimilates to the place of articulation of the following stop, so that /nkʰ/ or /nqʷʰ/ for example become /ŋkʰ/ and /ɴʷqʷʰ/.  Before fricatives, /n/ is deleted, and the proceeding vowel is lengthened and nasalised.  These processes apply between word boundries as well.  Word final /n/ as part of case and personal markers is elided before a word starting with a vowel, fricative, approximate, or before a [[w:Pausa|pausa]].
*The phoneme /ɣ/ has the greatest variance of all Aeranid phonemes, varying between dialects and even between individual speakers from [ɰ~ɣ~ʁ~ʀ~ɢ~ʕ~ɦ~Ø].  It often served as a [[w:Shibboleth|shibboleth]] for discerning one's origins or social circles.
*The phoneme /ɣ/ has the greatest variance of all Aeranid phonemes, varying between dialects and even between individual speakers from [ɰ~ɣ~ʁ~ʀ~ɢ~ʕ~ɦ~Ø].  It often served as a [[w:Shibboleth|shibboleth]] for discerning one's origins or social circles.
*The velar, labio-velar, and labio-uvular consonants /kʰ/, /k/, /kʷʰ/, /kʷ/, and /qʷʰ/ are palatalised before front vowels and /j/ to [kʲʰ], [], [kᶣʰ], [kᶣ], and [qᶣʰ] respectively.  Futhermore, dental consonants /n/, /tʰ/, and /t/ are palatalised before /j/ to [ɲ̟], [tʲʰ], and [tʲ].  The glottal fricative /h/ is also palatalised to [ç] before high front vowels and /j/.  Some dialects also palatalise the postalveolar consonants /s̠/ and /ts̠ʰ/ to [ɕ] and [tɕʰ] before front vowels and /j/.  In dialects were /ɣ/ is velar, it is often palatalised to [ʝ] in the same enviorments as the other velar consonants.
*The velar, labio-velar, and labio-uvular consonants /kʰ/, /k/, /kʷʰ/, /kʷ/, /qʰ/, and /qʷʰ/ are palatalised before front vowels and /j/ to [k̟ʰ], [], [kᶣʰ], [kᶣ], [k̠] and [k̠ᶣʰ] respectively.  Futhermore, dental consonants /n/, /tʰ/, and /t/ are palatalised before /j/ to [ɲ̟], [tʲʰ], and [tʲ].  The glottal fricative /h/ is also palatalised to [ç] before high front vowels and /j/.  Some dialects also palatalise the postalveolar consonants /s̠/ and /ts̠ʰ/ to [ɕ] and [tɕʰ] before front vowels and /j/.  In dialects were /ɣ/ is velar, it is often palatalised to [ʝ] in the same enviorments as the other velar consonants.
*The labialised consonants /kʷʰ/, /kʷ/, and /qʷʰ/ are pronounced as truly labialised, rather than a sequence of two consonants, i.e. /kʰw/, /kw/, /qʰw/.  The voiced labiovelar stop only occurs after a nasal consonant.
*The labialised consonants /kʷʰ/, /kʷ/, and /qʷʰ/ are pronounced as truly labialised, rather than a sequence of two consonants, i.e. /kʰw/, /kw/, /qʰw/.  The voiced labiovelar stop only occurs after a nasal consonant.
*All consonants, with the exception of /ʋ/, can be geminated between vowels.  This is denoted orthographically by doubling of the first letter of the phoneme, i.e. ⟨cc⟩, ⟨ff⟩, ⟨rrh⟩, etc.  The palatal approximate /j/ is always geminated to [jː] between vowels, but is written with a simple ⟨i⟩.  Fricative /hː/ is usually realised as [çː], however in dialects with uvular or pharyngeal articulation of /ɣ/, it is usually backed to match that articulation.  In dialects that palatalise /s̠/ and /ts̠ʰ/, [çː] often becomes [ɕː], merging in some environments with /s̠ː/.
*All consonants, with the exception of /ʋ/, can be geminated between vowels.  This is denoted orthographically by doubling of the first letter of the phoneme, i.e. ⟨cc⟩, ⟨ff⟩, ⟨rrh⟩, etc.  The palatal approximate /j/ is always geminated to [jː] between vowels, but is written with a simple ⟨i⟩.  Fricative /hː/ is usually realised as [çː], however in dialects with uvular or pharyngeal articulation of /ɣ/, it is usually backed to match that articulation.  In dialects that palatalise /s̠/ and /ts̠ʰ/, [çː] often becomes [ɕː], merging in some environments with /s̠ː/.
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