Alska/Dialects

Dialect Classification

Alska has six primary dialects. Four of these form a continuum across the main island of Alsland; the fifth and sixth dialects are not related to each other, but are easily recognizable as Alska.

On Alsland Proper, there are four dialect regions: East, West, North, and South. Southern Alslandic is the standard, and Northern Alslandic is the farthest from it. The two colonial dialects are even further, but are not spoken on the main island. These regions in turn have their own dialects, but they are far too small to be recognized by non-speakers as such.


Sydalska

<url=http://linguifex.com/index.php?title=Alska>Southern Alslandic<url> - Will fix later

Nordalska

Northern Alska is one of the least spoken of all the dialects, and is the farthest away from Southern Alska on the dialect continuum. Major differences include pronunciation, spelling, and small grammar changes.

Phonology

-
Letters Pronunciation Further information
a [ɑ:]/[ɑ] can make two different sounds, but has no short version
b [b] -
d [d] -
e [ɛ] / [e:] -
f [f] -
g [g] -
h [h] -
i [i] No short version
j [j] corresponds to y in English you
k [k] -
l [l] -
m [m] -
n [n] -
o [ò]/[o̞] -
p [p] -
r [ʁ]
s [s] -
t [t] -
u [u:] has no short version
v [f] -
y [i:] pronounced like 'e' in English 'me'
å [au] -
ø [ø] -
æy [aj] -
ey [ei:] -
uy [u:i] -
iy [i:j] Mid-closed version of [i:]
øy [øy] -

The Northern Alska alphabet has 28 letters. The five digraphs, æy, ey, ui, iy, and øy, are counted as single letters. All of these sounds can be made with Standard Alskan (SA) orthography, with the exception of [au], which is represented by the letter å in Northern Alska.


Certain letters, such as å and y do not correspond to their Standard counterparts. Compare the SA versions of å and y ([ɔ] and [y:]) to NA's [au] and [i:].

Grammar

Grammar is largely the same in Northern Alska as it is in Standard Alska, with a few execptions.

When verbs are in the infinitive, i is placed in front of them instead of SA's ett:

  • i koke (NA) - ett kyke (SA)