Valthungian/Intermediate Transcriptional Alphabet: Difference between revisions

m
no edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Category: Valthungian]]
[[Category: Valthungian pages for updating]]
Phonetic transliteration is not used regularly in Gutish, but is used frequently when discussing issues of historical linguistic significance to the language.  This is a merger of the Romanization of Gutish and phonetic notation (IPA), aimed to be more precise than transliteration but less cumbersome than IPA.  Characters with standard values continue to be written with the Latin transliteration, but others may have slightly different values. For the purposes of historical comparison, a standardized character set is used for Proto-Germanic, Gothic, and Gutish. All three alphabets are used throughout this work; those using this phonetic transcription are enclosed in slashes (/); Latin transliteration is generally italicized.
Phonetic transliteration is not used regularly in Gutish, but is used frequently when discussing issues of historical linguistic significance to the language.  This is a merger of the Romanization of Gutish and phonetic notation (IPA), aimed to be more precise than transliteration but less cumbersome than IPA.  Characters with standard values continue to be written with the Latin transliteration, but others may have slightly different values. For the purposes of historical comparison, a standardized character set is used for Proto-Germanic, Gothic, and Gutish. All three alphabets are used throughout this work; those using this phonetic transcription are enclosed in slashes (/); Latin transliteration is generally italicized.