Kathyrian: Difference between revisions

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Most linguists consider Kathyrian to have 6 monophthongs and one diphthong.  
Most linguists consider Kathyrian to have 7 vowels.  
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Revision as of 09:36, 19 January 2025

Kathyrian
Pronunciation/kəˈθɪrɪjən/
Language familyisolate
Eratoday
Writing systemGreek alphabet
Official status
Spoken inKathyria
Regulated bykatherine T. Awesome
Speaker
Endonymκατχήριαϊυ
Number of speakers1[1]
Technical information
UsageEverything in Kathyria
Language codekty


Kathyrian (natively κατχήριαϊυ kathýrjaiv /kaˈtːɨrjaˌiʋ/) is a language spoken in Kathyria. It officially uses the Greek alphabet. It seems to be a language isolate, as it bears no strong resemblance to any other known language.

Phonology

Kathyrian is usually analyzed to have 15 consonants.[2]

labial coronal dorsal
nasal m n
stop p b t d k g
fricative f s ː[3]
approximant ʋ l j
trill r

Most linguists consider Kathyrian to have 7 vowels.

front central back
high i ɨ[4] u
mid e o
low a ɒ[5]

Orthography

Kathyrian seems to have a mostly phonemic orthography.

natively latin transcription phoneme
Α α A a a
Β β B b b
Γ γ G g g
Δ δ D d d
Ε ε E e e
Ζ ζ Sd sd sd[6]
Η η Y y ɨ
Ι ι J j j
I i i
Κ κ K k k
Λ λ L l l
Μ μ M m m
Ν ν N n n
Ξ ξ Ks ks ks[7]
Ο ο O o o
Π π P p p
Ρ ρ R r r
Σ σ/ς S s s
Τ τ T t t
Υ υ V v ʋ
U u u
Φ φ F f f
Χ χ H h ː[8]
Ψ ψ Ps ps ps[9]
Ω ω Ao ao ɒ
΄ ´ [10]
¨ ¨ [11]

Footnotes

  1. in Nguhcraft, obviously
  2. some linguists debate the inclusion of /ː/ as a consonant; those in favor of considering it a consonant argue that it is treated as a fricative in all scenarios and seems to have historically been /h/
  3. when word-initial, lengthens the final phoneme of the previous word
  4. was probably historically /eː/
  5. was probably historically /oː/
  6. not its own phoneme, but a sequence that has its own letter
  7. not its own phoneme, but a sequence that has its own letter
  8. may sometimes be represented after consonant letters by repeating the letter instead
  9. not its own phoneme, but a sequence that has its own letter
  10. used to mark irregular stress; regular stress falls on the penultimate syllable
  11. used to indicate that υ or ι is pronounced as the vowel phoneme rather than the consonant when next to another vowel letter; only used in the Latin transcription to specify /ao/ rather than /ɒ/