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| == Carrie and Shawn discussion, 20 March ==
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| Points:
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| # Eliminate the sound û, replacing it in the negative prefix with ã.
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| # Eliminate the sound î, replacing it with å or i per root.
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| # Respell ê with ä in all places.
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| # Eliminate ô, respelling as o. Native English speakers are going to diphthong long Os whether we like it or not.
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| # We now have this list of weird ones:
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| #* ã
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| #* ä
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| #* å
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| #* æ
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| #* ø
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| #* õ
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| #* ö
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| #* ü
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| # Now, ä and ü match their German counterparts. Tri ø matches German ö; Tri ö is the only u-diphthong on this list, so let's swap the glyphs ø and ö, so now all three of ä ö ü match the German ones, and ø (the only slashed letter) is unique as the only u-diphthong.
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| # These remain:
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| #* ã
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| #* å
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| #* æ
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| #* ø (in case we come up with some other way to write it)
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| #* õ
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| # Ways to spell the /æ/ sound, as in "cat" or "hat" in languages using Latin letters: Most commonly by far are < a >, < ae > or < æ >, or < ä >.
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| # The reasonable options for that sound, given that < ä > is used already, are: ring (å), breve (ă), circumflex (â), or aesch (æ).
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| # A-ring has the virtue of being the only letter in European languages which uses the ring diacritic, and so it's kinda unique; furthermore, it has Triparik historic warrant. So let's keep it for now.
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| # These remain:
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| #* ã
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| #* æ
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| #* ø (in case we come up with some other way to write it)
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| #* õ
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| # If we like the three umlaut vowels because German, why wouldn't we like æ because Latin? Then these remain:
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| #* ã
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| #* ø (in case we come up with some other way to write it)
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| #* õ
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| # Now for the /au/ diphthong, we consider the breve because it looks like a little "u", and then between "ă" because it's -au- in both German and Latin, or "ŏ" because this is closer to As She Is Writ, and based on some testing Carrie likes ă better and although Shawn likes historical warrant he doesn't feel too strongly on this particular one, so we lean towards saying /au/ is written "ă".
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| # That leaves:
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| #* ã (hUt, cUt) (as in tãng)
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| #* õ (oi) (as in jõnt)
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| # Screw it, ø is a historical Triparik letter, and the slash even looks kinda like an I or part of a Y. So: drøt, jønt, driføl, etc. But, ô is also an original letter, and maybe the Prince of Grønbjerg hates being confused with Groinbyerg, so we can also accept jônt, drifôl, etc. We should run this by Alan.
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| # And since we decided hacek is palatal and Enye is now ň, we can keep the ã.
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| '''Alan must help decide:''' ă or ŏ for /au/, and ø or ô for /oi/.
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Consonants
Single letters
b, d, f, h, j, k, l, m, n, p, r, s, t, v, w, z
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as most commonly used in English
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c
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Always /k/ before a, o, u; always /s/ before i, e
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g
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Always hard, as in English get
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q
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Only occurs as part of a digraph qu representing the cluster /kw/
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x
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As in English axe, except at beginning of words, where it is pronounced as z
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y
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When before a vowel, consonantal as in English, like yet
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Digraphs
There are two acceptable orthographies for consonants: digraphs, and accented letters. A given text should consistently use one or the other.
Digraph
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Accented
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Sound
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cz
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č
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As in English church
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sz
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š
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As in English shoe
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nz
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ň
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As the ny in English canyon
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dz
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ð
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As the th in English that
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tz
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þ
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As the th in English think
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Vowels
Original
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IPA
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Sound
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Old Triparik
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a, e, i, o, u
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/a, e, i, o, u/
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As their common pronunciation in Romance languages
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Unchanged
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y
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/i/
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When used vocalically, usually at the end of words, pronounced like i
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Unchanged
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ä
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/eɪ̯/
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as in English hate
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ä, ê
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å
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/æ/
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as in English hat
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Unchanged
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ã
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/ʌ/
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as in English hut
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Unchanged
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ă
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/aʊ̯/
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as in English out
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ö
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æ
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/aɪ̯/
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as English aye
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Unchanged
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ö
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/œ/
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as in German Göttin
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ø
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ø
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/ɔɪ̯/
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as in English boy
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õ
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ü
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/y/
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as in German müssen
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Unchanged
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Sounds eliminated in 2016 Reforms
Original
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IPA
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Sound
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î
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/ɛ̃/
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nasal "i"
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ô
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/o̞ʊ̯/
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as in English boat
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û
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/œ̃/
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nasal "u"
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