Syltanennie
Syltanennie /ɕʏlteːnɛɲə/ is one of the official languages of Ettêre Ðiffyt, prior to the nation's renovation as Leporia, it was an official language exclusive to the region of Sevanpiec, which was called Svendie back then.
Phonology
Consonants
Labial | Labio-Dental | Dental | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plosive | p b | t d | c ɟ | k g | ||
Sibilant Fric. | s z | ɕ ʑ | ||||
Non-sibilant Fric. | f v | θ ð | ç | |||
Nasal | m | n | ɲ | |||
Lateral | l | |||||
Approximate | j | w | ʁ |
The dentals are dental-apical.
Although /ʁ/ is shown to be an approximate for phonological reasons, it is pronounced as a uvular fricative.
/θ/ and /ç/ are often voiced when intervocalic and neither of the vowels are stressed. /ç/ may even merge with /j/ in such cases.
/ð/ is very rare word-initially and is often exists just an allophonic voiced /θ/. However, loan words plus the prefixation and voicing of the definite article /ðɪ/ have introduced a few minimal pairs, making /ð/ a marginal phoneme.
/j/ and /w/ are both realized as [ɥ] when they precede /uː ʊ/ and /iː ɪ/ respectively.
Vowles
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | iː yː | ɯː uː | |
Near-High | ɪ ʏ | ɯ̽ ʊ | |
Mid-High | eː | oː | |
Middle | ə | ||
Mid-Low | ɛ ɛ̃ː | ɔ ɔ̃ː | |
Low | a | ɑ̃ː |
/ə/ only exists in word-final positions in polysyllabic words and is often extra-short [ə̆]. However, other vowels can also exist in the position so it is a marginal phoneme.
When back vowels precede palatals, they tend to become fronted, as the following:
- /ɯː/ to [ɨː]
- /uː/ to [ʉː]
- /ɯ̽/ to [ɘ̝]
- /ʊ/ to [ɵ̝]
- /oː/ to [ɵː~øː]
- /ɔ/ to [ɞ~œ]
- /ɔ̃ː/ to [œ̃ː]
- /a/ to [æ]
- /ɑ̃ː/ to [ʌ̃ː]
Syllable Structure
(C)(L)V *Generally
- Any consonant can start a syllable.
- V can be any vowel.
- C + L can be any non-palatal obstruent (stops and fricatives) + liquid (laterals and approximates) respectively.
- Word-internal clusters, i.e. there must be a vowel immediately preceding and proceeding the cluster (and the preceding vowel cannot be a nasal vowel), can be either:
- (/ʁ/ or /l/) + any obstruent (stops and fricatives), or
- Two fricatives that agree in voicing, the preceding fricative cannot be palatal, the proceeding fricative can be any fricative. Again, although /ʁ/ is phonetically a fricative it is phonologically an approximate, meaning it is not subject to the voicing agreement restrictions of double fricative clusters.
- More complex syllables can come about through contracted words and constructions: most notably, /ʁ/ + (/j/ or /w/) only exists in contracted constructions and not in any root.
Orthography
Syltanennie uses the Latin Script. Originally adopted almost a millennia ago for the language, it has since undergone standardization under the rule of.
Below is the table with the respective orthographical equivalents of the consonant phonemes.
Labial | Labio-Dental | Dental | Palatal[1] | Velar | Uvular | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plosive | p b | t d | ci gi | c g | ||
Sibilant Fric. | s z | si zi | ||||
Non-sibilant Fric. | f v | ð[2] | xi | |||
Nasal | m | n | ni | |||
Lateral | l | |||||
Approximate | i[3] | u[3] | r |
[1]Palatal consonants are always represented with a 〈i〉 after 〈c〉, 〈g〉, 〈s〉, 〈z〉, 〈x〉, and 〈n〉. However, this 〈i〉 is removed if the proceeding vowel is 〈i〉 or 〈y〉 in which case the letters listed before are always pronounced as palatals.
[2]Both dental fricatives are represented by 〈ð〉.
[3]〈i〉 and 〈u〉 are only /j/ and /w/ respectively when preceding another vowel.
Below is the table with the respective orthographical equivalents of the oral vowel phonemes.
Orthography | Phonemes |
---|---|
i | iː ɪ |
y | yː ʏ |
w | ɯː ɯ̽ |
u | uː ʊ |
e | eː ɛ ə[4] |
o | oː ɔ |
a | eː a |
[4]The Schwa only appears at the ends of words, and 〈e〉 at the ends of words is always /ə/.
Each vowel letter represents a long and short vowel. Which vowel the letter is representing is determined by the Open Syllable Lengthening rule:
- Open syllable vowels are long.
- Closed syllable vowels are short.
- A syllable is determined to be closed, and thus has a short vowel, if the vowel is proceeded by:
- One consonant with no vowel after.
- A double consonant.
- Two different consonants.
- Otherwise it is open, and thus has a long vowel.
- However one major exception is in conjugation and appending of suffixes, where the word-final vowels involved in these changes are always short.
Furthermore each vowel letter have variants with each of three diacritics:
- Acute: Used to indicate long vowels, usually when the OSL rule would otherwise indicate a short vowel.
- Grave: Used to indicate short vowels, usually when the OSL rule would otherwise indicate a long vowel.
- Circumflex: Used to indicate a word-final long vowel.
Below is the table with the respective orthographical equivalents of the nasal vowel phonemes.
Orthography | Phonemes |
---|---|
im in ym yn em en | ɛ̃ː |
um un on om | ɔ̃ː |
wm wn am an | ɑ̃ː |
These digraphs only hold true if the nasal consonant isn't proceeded by a vowel.