Jump to content

Triparic Pronunciation: Difference between revisions

From SeptemWiki
Line 145: Line 145:
|When used vocalically, usually at the end of words, pronounced like '''i'''
|When used vocalically, usually at the end of words, pronounced like '''i'''
|-
|-
| ä<ref name="ä"/>
| ä<ref name="ä"/> ("ah-umlŏt")
| /eɪ̯/
| /eɪ̯/
| as {{ab|a}} in English ''hate''
| as {{ab|a}} in English ''hate''
|-
|-
| å
| å ("ah-ring")
| /æ/
| /æ/
| as {{ab|a}} in English ''hat''
| as {{ab|a}} in English ''hat''
|-
|-
| ã
| ã ("ah-tilde")
| /ʌ/
| /ʌ/
| as {{ab|u}} in English ''hut''
| as {{ab|u}} in English ''hut''

Revision as of 17:43, 27 April 2016

The alphabet

The Triparic alphabet, upper and lower case forms, along with the names of the letters, is:

A a Æ æ B b C c D d Ð ð E e F f G g H h
ah æsch beh cheh deh eh if geh heh
I i J j K k L l M m N n O o P p Q q R r
ih jeh keh il im in oh peh quh ir
S s T t Þ þ U u V v W w X x Y y Z z
is teh þeh uh veh weh ix yeh zeh

Consonants

Consonant Description
b, d, f, h, k, l, m, n, p, t, v, w, z All as typically used in English.
c Always /k/, except in the digraphs ch and sch (see below).
ç Always /s/.
ch As ch in English church.
ð As the th in English that.
g Always hard, like in English get.
j Always the voiced affricate like in English jump.
q Pronounced /k/. Occurs in words of Romance origin.
r Throaty rather than trilled. Pronounced like the American English r.
s Pronounced /s/ in most contexts, except /z/ at the end of words after vowels or voiced consonants. When doubled, ss is always pronounced /s/, not /z/. This is like its behavior in English: consider "has", "kids", "lass".
sch As sh in English shoe.
þ As the th in English think.
x As in English axe, except at beginning of words, where it is pronounced as /z/.
y When before a vowel, consonantal as in English, as in yet.
zh As z in English azure.

Vowels

Vowel IPA Description
a, e, i, o, u /a, e, i, o, u/ As their common pronunciation in Romance languages
u /u, w/ When between a velar stop (c, k, q, g) and another vowel, pronounced like w; otherwise, pronounced like oo in English soon
y /i/ When used vocalically, usually at the end of words, pronounced like i
ä[1] ("ah-umlŏt") /eɪ̯/ as a in English hate
å ("ah-ring") /æ/ as a in English hat
ã ("ah-tilde") /ʌ/ as u in English hut
æ /aɪ̯/ as English aye
ö[2] /œ/ as in German Göttin
ø[3] /ɔɪ̯/ as oy in English boy
ŏ[4] /aʊ̯/ as ou in English out
ü /y/ as in German müssen
  1. This sound was spelled two different ways before the 2016 reform. The other was ê, used in a very few words, the best known being dêm (now däm).
  2. This sound was spelled ø before the 2016 reform.
  3. This sound was spelled õ before the 2016 reform.
  4. This sound was spelled ö before the 2016 reform.

Sounds eliminated in 2016 Reform

Original Sound Replacement
î nasal "i" like in French fin Replaced with i in most words; å in a few
ñ Palatalized "n" like ny in English canyon Very rare. Replaced with ny if necessary.
ô as oa in English boat No significant difference from o, so replaced with that
û nasal "u" like in French brun No significant difference from ã, so replaced with that

Key to Phonetics Symbols

Something written in angle brackets is one or more graphemes; that is, it represents something written. Something written in /slashes/ is one or more phonemes; that is, it represents the units of sound that speakers break their language down into. These are most properly written in the International Phonetic Alphabet.