All times are UTC [ DST ]





Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 11 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2  Next
  Print view

Unnamed Phonology
Author Message
PostPosted: Sun 17 May 2009 11:21 pm 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Sat 18 Apr 2009 10:51 pm
Posts:414
Location: San Francisco Area
Nasals: /m/ /n/
Plosive: /ʔ/
Fricatives: /f/ /v/ /s/ /z/ /θ/ /ð/ /ʃ/ /ʒ/ /h/
Approximates: /j/ /w/ /ʍ/
Trill: /r/
Lateral: /l/

Vowels: /ə/ /æ/ /ɑ/ /e/ /o/ /i/ /y/ /ɪ/ /u/
Diphthongs: /ɑi/ /oi/ /ui/

Note: When a word is written with a repeated vowel, example hwoo /ʍoʔo/ "tooth" a glottal stop is inserted between the vowel and it is pronounced twice. This is the only natural stop.

_________________
Native: English (NW American)
Advanced: Spanish
Intermediate: French
Beginning: Arabic (MSA/Egyptian)
Some day: German


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: Unnamed Phonology
PostPosted: Sun 17 May 2009 11:58 pm 
Offline

Joined:Thu 30 Apr 2009 4:16 pm
Posts:9
allophony? phonotatics? prosody?

And this is very unnatural. there is no language with /?/ as its only plosive.


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: Unnamed Phonology
PostPosted: Mon 18 May 2009 12:30 am 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Sat 18 Apr 2009 10:51 pm
Posts:414
Location: San Francisco Area
Vortex wrote:
allophony? phonotatics? prosody?

Haven't gotten there yet it's just a very basic phonology for now.

Quote:
And this is very unnatural. there is no language with /?/ as its only plosive.

Yes it is unnatural, that's why I posted it in the constructed languages forum... ;)

_________________
Native: English (NW American)
Advanced: Spanish
Intermediate: French
Beginning: Arabic (MSA/Egyptian)
Some day: German


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: Unnamed Phonology
PostPosted: Mon 18 May 2009 12:34 am 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Sat 18 Apr 2009 10:51 pm
Posts:414
Location: San Francisco Area
dtp883 wrote:
Nasals: /m/ /n/
Plosive: /ʔ/
Fricatives: /f/ /v/ /s/ /z/ /θ/ /ð/ /ʃ/ /ʒ/ /h/
Approximates: /j/ /w/ /ʍ/
Trill: /r/
Lateral: /l/

Vowels: /ə/ /æ/ /ɑ/ /e/ /o/ /i/ /y/ /ɪ/ /u/
Diphthongs: /ɑi/ /oi/ /ui/

Note: When a word is written with a repeated vowel, example hwoo /ʍoʔo/ "tooth" a glottal stop is inserted between the vowel and it is pronounced twice. This is the only natural stop.


I decided to throw out bolded sections.

_________________
Native: English (NW American)
Advanced: Spanish
Intermediate: French
Beginning: Arabic (MSA/Egyptian)
Some day: German


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: Unnamed Phonology
PostPosted: Mon 18 May 2009 1:10 am 
Offline

Joined:Thu 30 Apr 2009 4:16 pm
Posts:9
dtp883 wrote:
Vortex wrote:
allophony? phonotatics? prosody?

Haven't gotten there yet it's just a very basic phonology for now.

Quote:
And this is very unnatural. there is no language with /?/ as its only plosive.

Yes it is unnatural, that's why I posted it in the constructed languages forum... ;)


Well of I know that it is technically not natural, remember I been conlanging for almost 5 years now. But usually it should be avoid to make some to unnatural


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: Unnamed Phonology
PostPosted: Mon 18 May 2009 4:43 am 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Sun 19 Apr 2009 10:42 am
Posts:332
Location: Austin, TX, USA
/p t k/, and most likely /b d g/ too. /p t k/ are one of those linguistic universals, and your language has a voicing distinction in fricatives, so I assume that it would also have that in its plosives.

_________________
dansk - italiano - esperanto - Deutsch - português - tiếng Việt - עברית - ‘ōlelo Hawai‘i - ελλινικά - العربية - 中文 - íslenska


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: Unnamed Phonology
PostPosted: Mon 18 May 2009 4:27 pm 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Fri 17 Apr 2009 9:59 pm
Posts:397
Location: Canada
Quote:
Plosive: /ʔ/
Fricatives: /f/ /v/ /s/ /z/ /θ/ /ð/ /ʃ/ /ʒ/ /h/

Oh yeah, this is the second conlang I've seen with a phonology like this. It always brings a grin to my face. Image


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: Unnamed Phonology
PostPosted: Tue 19 May 2009 2:37 am 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Sat 18 Apr 2009 10:51 pm
Posts:414
Location: San Francisco Area
Neqitan wrote:
Quote:
Plosive: /ʔ/
Fricatives: /f/ /v/ /s/ /z/ /θ/ /ð/ /ʃ/ /ʒ/ /h/

Oh yeah, this is the second conlang I've seen with a phonology like this. It always brings a grin to my face. Image


I dropped the /ʔ/.

A laughing grin, or a mocking grin?

_________________
Native: English (NW American)
Advanced: Spanish
Intermediate: French
Beginning: Arabic (MSA/Egyptian)
Some day: German


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: Unnamed Phonology
PostPosted: Tue 19 May 2009 4:26 am 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Fri 17 Apr 2009 9:59 pm
Posts:397
Location: Canada
dtp883 wrote:
A laughing grin, or a mocking grin?

A laughing one. The other conlang I saw with a similar consonants had almost twice that number of fricatives though.


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: Unnamed Phonology
PostPosted: Tue 19 May 2009 4:37 am 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Sat 18 Apr 2009 10:51 pm
Posts:414
Location: San Francisco Area
Neqitan wrote:
dtp883 wrote:
A laughing grin, or a mocking grin?

A laughing one. The other conlang I saw with a similar consonants had almost twice that number of fricatives though.


Well I can't pronounce the /ɣ/ in rapid speech so I decided against it and had to leave out the /x/. I plan to have /ç/ as an allophone. And I couldn't have an affricatives because that would include stops.

_________________
Native: English (NW American)
Advanced: Spanish
Intermediate: French
Beginning: Arabic (MSA/Egyptian)
Some day: German


Top
 Profile  
 

Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 11 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2  Next

All times are UTC [ DST ]


  Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
 
15 Srinagar hotels from DirectRooms


Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group