Triparic Pronunciation: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Line 91: | Line 91: | ||
|cheh-çedil | |cheh-çedil | ||
|oh-breve | |oh-breve | ||
|oh- | |oh-schmiss | ||
|oh-umlŏt | |oh-umlŏt | ||
|uh-umlŏt | |uh-umlŏt |
Revision as of 20:17, 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 | ið | 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 |
Diacritics
Some letters occur in forms with diacritics. These are not considered separate letters.
å | ã | ä | ç | ŏ | ø | ö | ü |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ah-ring | ah-tilde | ah-umlŏt | cheh-çedil | oh-breve | oh-schmiss | oh-umlŏt | uh-umlŏt |
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] | /eɪ̯/ | as ⟨a⟩ in English hate |
å | /æ/ | as ⟨a⟩ in English hat |
ã | /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 |
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.