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Phonology

Consonants

The consonants are grouped into their traditional classifications.

Labial Dental Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive p t s k ʔ
Fricative v ð z g
Sonorant m n j
Lateral l

<super>The single lateral counts as everything but labial</super>

Notes for the older form of the language

On assimilation where clusters arise...

  • Any two plosives that come in contact result in a geminated version of the second plosive.
  • akta > atta
  • atpa > appa
  • aʔka > akka &c.
  • Any two fricatives that some in contact result in a geminated version of the second one's corresponding plosive.
  • aðga > akka
  • avða > atta &c.
  • Any plosive or fricative that comes before a nasal will result in its gemination.
  • apna > anna
but
  • apja = apja (while aja appears dialectally, it is not part of the most achaic level of the language)
  • Any fricative that comes after a nasal will be converted to a plosive.
  • anða > anta
Furthermore, the nasal will match the traditional place of articulation (TPOA) of the plosive, even if it means becoming denasalised.
  • anza > ajsa (this is largely historical).
  • Where two non-sonorant (sonorant excl. laterals) consonants of the same TPOA come in contact, it tends to result in the gemination of the second consonant. For this, the lateral counts as
  • aðta > atta
  • atla > alla
but
  • apla = apla
There is one exception: L can precede any consonant (although historically it shifts to J before S)
  • alta = alta

Notes for the speech of (X LARGE AND NEW) group

On assimilation where clusters arise...

  • Plosives with plosives, fricatives with fricatives, etc et al, form geminates
  • atka > akka
  • aðpa > appa
  • Anything next to a nasal forms a nasal geminate (not in the older form)
  • amna > anna
  • anta > anna
  • All dentals next to a lateral form a lateral geminate (not in the older form)
  • alka > alla
  • alna > alla
  • Remaining laterals are absorbed into geminates if at the front, and vice versa.
  • alma > amma
  • amla > alla
  • apla > alla
  • alka > akka
  • alsa > assa &c.
For fricatives, this can result in the lateral being dropped, or the same as above.
  • alga > aga, akka (These are called "dissonant gradation pairs").

Essentially, the differences between older forms of the language and newer forms is that the newer forms avoid any and all clusters by making them geminated consonants.