User:Chrysophylax/merrish
Merrish | |
---|---|
Mbhath her Maer | |
Pronunciation | [[Help:IPA|[[mwaθ χeɾ maːeɾ]]]] |
Created by | Chrysophylax |
Setting | Ardam |
Isolate
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | qmw |
Background
Phonology
Segments
Consonants
Chrysophylax/merrish has 18 consonants. A significant portion are fricatives.
bilabial | labiodental | dental | (post)alveolar | velar | uvular | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
nasal | m | n | ||||
stops | t d | ⟨c⟩ k g | ⟨k⟩ q | |||
fricatives | f v | ⟨th⟩ θ ⟨dh⟩ ð | ⟨z⟩ s̺ˡ ⟨s⟩ ʃ | ⟨ch⟩ x | ⟨h⟩ χ | |
tap | ⟨r⟩ ɾ | |||||
approximant | ⟨bh⟩ w |
The approximant /w/ is realised as [u] in positions where a consonant would be forbidden. Clusters are forbidden in the coda and thus in words such as 'mabhr' /mawɾ/ /w/ surfaces as [mauɾ]. Compare with mbhath /mwaθ/ where /w/ remains a consonant.
Vowels
Chrysophylax/merrish has, in the traditional analysis, a phonemically vertical three-vowel system. There is no length distinction. Phonetically, the low vowel a can be realised as a back, semi-rounded vowel [ɑʷ] before uvular consonants or as an (occasionally long) [æ] before a historical /j/ (written ⟨gh⟩ in the orthography).
Some have argued one should count another vowel phoneme æ on the basis of minimal pairs such as mbha [mwa] and mbhagh [mwæː]. Traditionally, however, consensus has been that in light of its restricted appearance (only appearing before historical /j/, does not appear in CVC syllables) and metrical patterning (CV syllables with *æ count as heavy syllables unlike those with an /a i u/), æ is at most a marginal, emerging phoneme and better viewed as an allophone of /a/.
Front | Near-front | Central | Near-back | Back | |
Close | |||||
Near‑close | |||||
Close‑mid | |||||
Mid | |||||
Open‑mid | |||||
Near‑open | |||||
Open |
Chrysophylax/merrish has three falling diphthongs ⟨egh⟩ /ei/, ⟨abh⟩ /au/, ⟨ae⟩ /ae/ which may be pronounced with the first element slightly lengthened, e.g. /maeɾ/ [maːeɾ].
Syllables
The Merrish syllable can assume the following forms: V, VC, CV, CVC. In addition to this, an approximant G can flank the nucleus on either or both sides. The syllable is maximally CGVGC e.g. fbhabhr /fwawr/ [fwaur] ('forest'). In the case of an underlying double glide syllable, the first approximant from the right is wholly vocalised. This process historically accounts for ⟨mbheghr⟩ becoming /mweir/.
Phonotactic restrictions
Onset
The phonemes /q/, /r/, /x/ do not occur in this position in the native lexicon.
Coda
/ʃ/ never appears in the coda.
Syllabic weight
A single vowel has the weight of one mora μ in an open syllable while a diphthong has two. All vowels in closed syllables count as two morae. Extraordinarily, syllables with the pseudophoneme æ always counts as two morae.
Phonological word
The phonological word must at its minimum consist of two morae.