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Triparic Pronunciation: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 21:56, 27 April 2016

The Alphabet

The Triparic alphabet consists of 29 letters: the standard 26-letter English alphabet plus Æ, Ð, and Þ.

Letter Name Sound Approximate English description
A a ah /a/ Like in father.
Æ æ æsch /aɪ/ Like the word aye.
B b beh /b/ Like in ball.
C c cheh /k/ Like in cap, except in the multigraphs
ch and sch (see below).[1]
D d deh /d/ Like in dog.
Ð ð /ð/ Like th in there.
E e eh /e/ Similar to ay in may, but less of a diphthong.
More like the "pure" e in Romance languages.
F f if /f/ Like in fill.
G g geh /g/ Like in garden.
H h heh /h/ Like in happy.
I i ih /j/ or /i/ When before another vowel, like y in yet;
otherwise, like in machine.
J j jeh /dʒ/ Like in jump.
K k keh /k/ Like in kid.
L l il /l/ Like in lamp.
M m im /m/ Like in magic.
N n in /n/ Like in now.
O o oh /o/ Similar to its sound in hope, but less of a diphthong.
More like the "pure" o in Romance languages.
P p peh /p/ Like in party.
Q q quh /k/ Like in quick.
Note that q stands without a u much more often in Triparic than in English.
R r ir /ɹ/ Like in red.
This is the throaty "r" of American English rather than a trill.
S s is /s/ Like in sad.
T t teh /t/ Like in top.
Þ þ þeh /θ/ Like th in think.
U u uh /u/ or /w/ When before another vowel, like w in water;
otherwise, like oo in goose.
V v veh /v/ Like in voice.
W w weh /w/ Like in water.
X x ix /ks/ Like in six.
Y y yeh /j/ or /i/ When before another vowel, like in yet;
otherwise, like in pretty.
Z z zeh /z/ Like in zebra.
  1. Before the 2016 reform, this letter was pronounced like ch when before the vowels i or e, and like k elsewhere.

Diacritics

Some letters may be marked with diacritics to produce different sounds. These are not considered separate letters.

Glyphs Name Sound Approximate English description
Ä ä ah-umlŏt /eɪ/ Like a in rate.[1]
Å å ah-ring /æ/ Like a in bath.
à ã ah-tilde /ə/ Like a in about.
Ç ç cheh-çedil /s/ Like c in certain.
Ö ö oh-umlŏt /œ/ No good English equivalent. Like in German Göttin.
An approximation is the e in the syllable er.[2]
Ŏ ŏ oh-breve /aʊ/ Like ou in house.[3]
Ø ø oh-schmiss /ɔɪ/ Like oy in boy.[4]
Ü ü uh-umlŏt /y/ No good English equivalent. Like in German müssen.
Like the vowel i but with rounded lips.
  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 ö before the 2016 reform.
  4. This sound was spelled õ before the 2016 reform.

Multigraphs

Finally, there are a few cases where a combination of letters is pronounced as a single phoneme.

Multigraph Sound Approximate English description
ch /tʃ/ Like in champ.
sch /ʃ/ Like sh in ship.
zh /ʒ/ Like z in azure.

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.