Appendix:Övüsi pronunciation: Difference between revisions

From The Languages of David J. Peterson
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "The Övüsi language has X consonants, Y vowels with P lengths and Z glides. == Standard Romanization == {| class="wikitable" cellpadding="5" |- ! Letter ! IPA ! English...")
 
No edit summary
 
(5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The [[Övüsi language]] has X consonants, Y vowels with P lengths and Z glides.
{{LangBar|Övüsi|Bright dialogue}}
 
The [[Övüsi language]] has 19 consonants, 14 vowels and no glides.


== Standard Romanization ==
== Standard Romanization ==
Line 11: Line 13:
|-
|-
| '''a'''
| '''a'''
| a
| ɑ
| f'''a'''ther
| f'''a'''ther
|
|
Line 153: Line 155:
Notes:
Notes:
* '''Long Vowels''': Long vowels are held for twice as long as ordinary vowels. Consider the "a" vowel in English "bat" and in English "bad". Notice how the "a" vowel in "bad" is considerably longer than the "a" vowel in "bat"? The same can be true of any vowel in Övüsi. Such vowels are written doubled (e.g. ''a'' is a short vowel and ''aa'' is a long vowel).  
* '''Long Vowels''': Long vowels are held for twice as long as ordinary vowels. Consider the "a" vowel in English "bat" and in English "bad". Notice how the "a" vowel in "bad" is considerably longer than the "a" vowel in "bat"? The same can be true of any vowel in Övüsi. Such vowels are written doubled (e.g. ''a'' is a short vowel and ''aa'' is a long vowel).  
* '''Diphthongs''': Aside from th two diphthongs ''ai'' and ''au'', whenever a vowel occurs next to another vowel, both are pronounced fully. Some common vowel combinations you'll see in Övüsi are ''uo'', ''ie'', ''ou'', and ''ei''. In each instance, both vowels are pronounced (so ''u'' then ''o'' for ''uo''). Neither vowel sound should be lost.  
* '''Diphthongs''': Aside from the two diphthongs ''ai'' and ''au'', whenever a vowel occurs next to another vowel, both are pronounced fully. Some common vowel combinations you'll see in Övüsi are ''uo'', ''ie'', ''ou'', and ''ei''. In each instance, both vowels are pronounced (so ''u'' then ''o'' for ''uo''). Neither vowel sound should be lost.  
* '''Double Consonants''': Doubled consonants, or geminates, occur frequently in Övüsi. To pronounce a doubled consonant, simply pronounce it twice. You might think of it as lingering over the consonant. Think of the "s" sound you pronounce in "Miss Sally". It's a longer "s" than if you pronounce the similar phrase "Miss Ally". The same goes for the doubled consonants of Övüsi. One important note about the romanization: If a digraph (e.g. ''sh'', ''th'', etc.) is doubled, only the first letter will be doubled (hence, ''nng'' not ''ngng''). The consonant is pronounced like a doubled consonant, though, as actual combinations such as ''t'' followed by ''th'' are impossible.
* '''Double Consonants''': Doubled consonants, or geminates, occur frequently in Övüsi. To pronounce a doubled consonant, simply pronounce it twice. You might think of it as lingering over the consonant. Think of the "s" sound you pronounce in "Miss Sally". It's a longer "s" than if you pronounce the similar phrase "Miss Ally". The same goes for the doubled consonants of Övüsi. One important note about the romanization: If a digraph (e.g. ''sh'', ''th'', etc.) is doubled, only the first letter will be doubled (hence, ''nng'' not ''ngng''). The consonant is pronounced like a doubled consonant, though, as actual combinations such as ''t'' followed by ''th'' are impossible.


Line 165: Line 167:


[[Category:Pronunciation by language]]
[[Category:Pronunciation by language]]
[[Category:Shiväisith language]]
[[Category:Övüsi language|Pronunciation]]

Latest revision as of 07:48, 2 December 2023

Övüsi Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary, Orthography, Dialogue

The Övüsi language has 19 consonants, 14 vowels and no glides.

Standard Romanization

Letter IPA English example Notes
a ɑ father
b b bad
ch each
d d dog
e e bait
ë ɤ cut
f f food
g g goat
h h ham
i i machine
ï ɯ good Pronounced like the oo in Southern Californian English good. Like an ordinary oo, as in "mood", but with the lips completely unrounded.
j jam
k k skill
l l left
m m man
n n no Assimilates to a following velar consonant.
ng ŋ sing
o o tote
ö ø Like e pronounced with rounded lips, like German ö in Köln.
p p span
r ɾ~r battle Like Spanish r in pero. When doubled, like Spanish rr in perro.
s s see
sh ʃ sheep
t t stop
th θ thin
u u rude
ü y Like i pronounced with rounded lips, like German ü in für.
v v voice

Notes:

  • Long Vowels: Long vowels are held for twice as long as ordinary vowels. Consider the "a" vowel in English "bat" and in English "bad". Notice how the "a" vowel in "bad" is considerably longer than the "a" vowel in "bat"? The same can be true of any vowel in Övüsi. Such vowels are written doubled (e.g. a is a short vowel and aa is a long vowel).
  • Diphthongs: Aside from the two diphthongs ai and au, whenever a vowel occurs next to another vowel, both are pronounced fully. Some common vowel combinations you'll see in Övüsi are uo, ie, ou, and ei. In each instance, both vowels are pronounced (so u then o for uo). Neither vowel sound should be lost.
  • Double Consonants: Doubled consonants, or geminates, occur frequently in Övüsi. To pronounce a doubled consonant, simply pronounce it twice. You might think of it as lingering over the consonant. Think of the "s" sound you pronounce in "Miss Sally". It's a longer "s" than if you pronounce the similar phrase "Miss Ally". The same goes for the doubled consonants of Övüsi. One important note about the romanization: If a digraph (e.g. sh, th, etc.) is doubled, only the first letter will be doubled (hence, nng not ngng). The consonant is pronounced like a doubled consonant, though, as actual combinations such as t followed by th are impossible.

Phonetics

Consonants

Vowels

Diphthongs