Zjugo

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Zjugo
Pronunciation[ˈʑɯ.gɤ̞]
Language familyIsolate, Paleo-Hlabiglan
Early form(s)Zjiogeo
Eratoday
Writing systemLatin alphabet, Zjugohai
Official status
Spoken inHiso Zju'a
Speaker
EndonymZjugo (in Zjugo)
Zjuan (in English)
Technical information
Language codeZG


Zjuan /ˈʒuw.ən/ (ZG Zjugo /ˈʑɯ.gɤ̞/) is an isolate, Paleo-Hlambiglan language spoken in Hiso Zju'a. It is one of the three languages spoken there, each belonging primarily to one of the three most represented ethnicities residing there. Zjugo belongs to the [unnamed] group, native to Zju'an land and is the only language in Zju'a, which doesn't have a major speaking population anywhere else.

Phonology

Consonants

Zjuan consonants feature a full voicing distinction in all plosives and fricatives except for the velar fricatives. They also include a palatalization distinction for all plosives and fricatives and alveolar/palatal nasal consonants. Especially in recent times, labial and velar palatalized consonants are often articulated as consonant clusters with the palatal approximant.

labial alveolar palatal velar glottal
plain palatalized plain palatalized
nasal m n ɲ
plosive unvoiced p t t͡ɕ k
voiced b d d͡ʑ g
fricative unvoiced f s ɕ x (h)
voiced v z ʑ
trill/approximant w r~ɾ j
lateral l

Vowels

Zjugo features a simple five vowel system. Main things to note is the lack of an open central vowel, as it is being replaced instead with the near-open front unrounded vowel, and the lack of rounding.

front back
close i ɯ
mid ɤ̞
open æ

Diphthongs

Any Zjuan vowel except /i/ and /ɯ/ may appear as the first vowel in a diphthong followed by /i/ (frequently articulated as [ɪ] when appearing like this).

Phonotactics

Any Zjugo syllable is made up of at least a vowel or diphthong, which may be proceeded by any consonant and/or followed by /n/. Note that a syllable ending with /n/ can be followed by a syllable starting with a vowel. This is phonemically distinct from a syllable ending with a vowel followed by a syllable starting with /n/, that is, for instance, /ˈme̞n.æi/ is distinct from /ˈme̞.næi/. Obstruents and /n/ get palatalized by default when followed by /i/, plain variants are not allowed in that position.

Spelling

Here are the letters and digraphs used to spell Zjugo, when using the Latin script. Whenever a sequence of letters is ambiguous, an apostrophe must be used to clarify syllable boundaries. For example /ˈme̞.næi/ is spelled menai, meanwhile /ˈme̞n.æi/ is spelled men'ai. This is also done to clarify whether something is or isn't a palatalization digraph, for instance /ˈfʲæn.jæn/ is spelled fjan'jan, however fjanjan would be pronounced /ˈfʲæ.ɲæn/, except for that it isn't a real word. Consonant letters followed by i, not separated by an apostrophe are automatically considered palatalized.

Letter Pronunciation digraph pronunciation
A /æ/ Ai /æi/
B /b/ Bj /bʲ/
D /d/ Dj /d͡ʑ/
E /e̞/ Ei /e̞i/
F /f/ Fj /fʲ/
G /g/ Gj /gʲ/
H /x/ Hj /xʲ/
I /i/
J /j/
K /k/ Kj /kʲ/
L /l/
M /m/
N /n/ Nj /ɲ/
O /ɤ̞/ Oi /ɤ̞i/
P /p/ Pj /pʲ/
R /r~ɾ/
S /s/ Sj /ɕ/
T /t/ Tj /t͡ɕ/
U /ɯ/
V /v/ Vj /vʲ/
W /w/
Z /z/ Zj /ʑ/

Zjugohai

Zjugohai /ˈʑɯ.gɤ̞.xai/ is the original way used to spell Zjugo, although it has since begun to fall out of use in favor of the Latin script. It is a syllabary featuring characters for every combination of a plain voiceless consonant followed by a vowel (including the lack of a consonant). It's written top to bottom with its columns advancing right to left. Voicing and palatalization are spelled using other strategies, discussed later.

Voicing

Voiced obstruents are spelled by placing a diacritic to the left of the right syllable character. Voiced palatalized consonants still have this diacritic on the first character.

Palatalization

Consonant vowel pairs with a palatalized consonant are spelled as a digraph, including a character of the voiceless unpalatalized equivalent consonant with the i vowel. That is then followed by one of the four special palatalization characters; one exists for each vowel except i itself. Diphthongs following palatalized consonants are spelled by placing a diacritic, identical in appearance to the one used for voicing, onto the palatalization character. There are no palatalization characters for the i vowel as obstruents (and n) followed by i are palatalized by default and, in fact, are not allowed to be plain when in that position.

Diphthongs and syllable-final n

As discussed earlier, Zjugo only permits one consonant to appear phonemically in syllable codas and that is /n/. This is spelled with a special character. If syllable contains no such coda and no palatalized consonant, a reverse-S-like character is used, meanwhile if a syllable contains this coda and also a diphthong, it is spelled with another special character, being a variant of the final n character, and lastly if the final n is included in a syllable with a palatalized consonant, a variant of the appropriate palatalization character is used.