9,172
edits
Bpnjohnson (talk | contribs) m (→æ and e) |
Bpnjohnson (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 188: | Line 188: | ||
| a || b || d || ð || e,ə || f || g || h,x || iː | | a || b || d || ð || e,ə || f || g || h,x || iː | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''jot'' || ''ké'' || ''el'' || ''em'' || ''en'' || '' | | ''jot'' || ''ké'' || ''el'' || ''em'' || ''en'' || ''ó'' || ''pé'' || ''er'' || ''es'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Jj''' || '''Kk''' || '''Ll''' || '''Mm''' || '''Nn''' || '''Oo''' || '''Pp''' || '''Rr''' || '''Ss''' | | '''Jj''' || '''Kk''' || '''Ll''' || '''Mm''' || '''Nn''' || '''Oo''' || '''Pp''' || '''Rr''' || '''Ss''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| j || k || l || m || n || | | j || k || l || m || n || ɔ || p || r || s | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''té'' || ''ú'' || ''vé'' || ''wo'' || ''ý'' || ''azet'' || ''þé'' || ''å'' || ''ø'' | | ''té'' || ''ú'' || ''vé'' || ''wo'' || ''ý'' || ''azet'' || ''þé'' || ''å'' || ''ø'' | ||
Line 198: | Line 198: | ||
| '''Tt''' || '''Uu''' || '''Vv''' || '''Ww''' || '''Yy''' || '''Zz''' || '''Þþ''' || '''Åå''' || '''Øø''' | | '''Tt''' || '''Uu''' || '''Vv''' || '''Ww''' || '''Yy''' || '''Zz''' || '''Þþ''' || '''Åå''' || '''Øø''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| t || ʊ || v || w || ʏ || z || θ || | | t || ʊ || v || w || ʏ || z || θ || ɔː || øː | ||
|} | |} | ||
Line 209: | Line 209: | ||
| ɑː || eː || ɫ̩ || m̩|| n̩|| ŋ̩|| r̩ | | ɑː || eː || ɫ̩ || m̩|| n̩|| ŋ̩|| r̩ | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''ng''' || ''' | | '''ng''' || '''Óó''' || '''Úú''' || '''ugw''' || '''uhw''' || '''ukw''' || '''Ýý''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ŋ|| | | ŋ|| oː|| uː|| ʊgw || ʊxw || ʊkw || yː | ||
|} | |} | ||
[[File:Northeadish-reform.ogg|Northeadish Reform Alphabet]] | [[File:Northeadish-reform.ogg|Northeadish Reform Alphabet]] | ||
The Reform Alphabet has many fewer letters than the Standard Literary Alphabet (twenty-seven as opposed to forty-four), and, alphabetically, long and short variants of vowels are considered the same letter. It follows the standard alphabetical order of other Germanic languages (that is, the standard Latin order, followed by thorn, a-ring, and o-slash). Unlike Icelandic, however, long vowels are not considered separate letters alphabetically. Long vowels are indicated by an acute accent, as in Icelandic or Faroese; those long vowels which no longer have a short equivalent (i | The Reform Alphabet has many fewer letters than the Standard Literary Alphabet (twenty-seven as opposed to forty-four), and, alphabetically, long and short variants of vowels are considered the same letter. It follows the standard alphabetical order of other Germanic languages (that is, the standard Latin order, followed by thorn, a-ring, and o-slash). Unlike Icelandic, however, long vowels are not considered separate letters alphabetically. Long vowels are indicated by an acute accent, as in Icelandic or Faroese; those long vowels which no longer have a short equivalent (i, and ø) can be written without any diacritic. | ||
The names of the letters are standardized to Latin letters and are no longer associated with earlier runic names. All characters fall within the Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement Unicode character ranges. | The names of the letters are standardized to Latin letters and are no longer associated with earlier runic names. All characters fall within the Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement Unicode character ranges. |