Appendix:Sondiv pronunciation: Difference between revisions

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! Letter
! Letter
! IPA
! IPA
! English example
! Example
! Notes
! Notes
|-
|-
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| '''on'''
| '''on'''
| ɔ̃
| ɔ̃
| '''on'''(''French'')
| '''on''' (''French'')
| A nasal vowel.
| A nasal vowel.
|-
|-
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== Phonetics ==
== Phonetics ==
Sondiv is notable for having nasal vowels, as well as some final consonants that are lost in most positions but reintroduced if a word beginning with a vowel immediately follows them and is a part of the same constituent.  
Sondiv has an average-sized phoneme inventory, but is notable for having nasal vowels.


=== Consonants ===
=== Consonants ===
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! colspan="2" |  
! colspan="2" |  
! Labial
! Labial
! Alveolar
! Coronal
! Palatal
! Palatal
! Velar
! Velar
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|-
|-
! colspan="2" | Nasal
! colspan="2" | Nasal
| m [m] ||  n [n] || (n [ɲ]) || (n [ŋ]) ||
| m [m] ||  n [n] || || ||
|-
|-
! rowspan="2" | Plosive
! rowspan="2" | Plosive
! <small>voiceless</small>
! <small>voiceless</small>
| p [p] || t [t]  || || k [k] ||
| p [p] || t [t]  || (ch [tʃ]) || k [k] ||
|-
|-
! <small>voiced</small>
! <small>voiced</small>
| b [b] || d [d]  ||  || g [g] ||
| b [b] || d [d]  || (j [dʒ]) || g [g] ||
|-
|-
! rowspan="2" | Fricative
! rowspan="2" | Fricative
! <small>voiceless</small>
! <small>voiceless</small>
| f [f] ||  s [s] || ||  || h [h]
| f [f] ||  (th [θ]), s [s] || (sh [ʃ]) ||  || h [h]
|-
|-
! <small>voiced</small>
! <small>voiced</small>
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| w [w] || r [ɾ] || y [j]  ||  ||
| w [w] || r [ɾ] || y [j]  ||  ||
|}
|}
/tʃ/, /dʒ/, /θ/ and /ʃ/ are only found in loanwords.


=== Vowels ===
=== Vowels ===
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|
|
|}
|}
=== Stress ===
Stress always falls on a word's last syllable in Sondiv, the last syllable of a phrase usually gets the strongest stress.
=== Phonotactics ===
Sondiv's syllables generally follow a (C)V(C) structure, but some words end with underlying 2-consonant clusters whose second consonant is only pronounced if a word beginning with a vowel immediately follows and is a part of the same constituent, otherwise they are silent. Similarly, a Sondiv word may end with /h/, which is only pronounced if a word beginning with a vowel immediately follows, otherwise it stays silent.
Many Sondiv stems start with consonant clusters, but since stems do not appear without a prefix, these clusters can never appear word-initially. Most consonants can appear twice in a row, and some vowel sequences can also occur, there are no diphthongs, however. In consonant clusters, the first consonant agrees in voicing with the second.
Syllables may not end with a nasal consonant, since all syllable-final nasals were deleted after the vowels before them became nasalized. Words may not end with /z/, as /z/ merged with /s/ word-finally, /h/ does not appear after consonants, /j/ does not appear before /i/ and turns into /ʒ/ when this happens, and /w/ does not appear before /u/ and turns into /v/ when this happens.
The question particle ''[[yen]]'' is pronounced /jen/ before a word beginning with a vowel if both are emphasized, but if only ''yen'' is emphasized, it is always pronounced /jɛ̃/.


[[Category:Pronunciation by language]]
[[Category:Pronunciation by language]]
[[Category:Sondiv language]]
[[Category:Sondiv language]]

Latest revision as of 10:37, 28 May 2024

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

The Sondiv language has 18 consonants and 8 vowels.

Standard Romanization

Letter IPA Example Notes
a a father It has both a front and back pronunciation.
an ɐ̃ - A nasal version of a regular a, but centralized.
b b bog
d d dog
e e bait
en ɛ̃ prince (French) A nasal vowel.
f f food
g g good
h h ham
i i beet
j ʒ azure Spelled with a j because the show takes place in New Orleans and the language is reminiscent of French.
k k skill
l l left
m m man
n n no
o o coat
on ɔ̃ on (French) A nasal vowel.
p p span
r ɾ battle
s s see
t t stop
u u rude
v v voice
w w wet
y j yawn
z z zoo

Phonetics

Sondiv has an average-sized phoneme inventory, but is notable for having nasal vowels.

Consonants

Labial Coronal Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m [m] n [n]
Plosive voiceless p [p] t [t] (ch [tʃ]) k [k]
voiced b [b] d [d] (j [dʒ]) g [g]
Fricative voiceless f [f] (th [θ]), s [s] (sh [ʃ]) h [h]
voiced v [v] z [z] zh [ʒ]
Lateral l [l]
Approximant w [w] r [ɾ] y [j]

/tʃ/, /dʒ/, /θ/ and /ʃ/ are only found in loanwords.

Vowels

Sondiv has 8 phonetically distinct vowels:

Front Central Back
Close i [i] u [u]
Mid e [e], en [ɛ̃] o [o], on [ɔ̃]
Open a [a] an [ɐ̃]

Stress

Stress always falls on a word's last syllable in Sondiv, the last syllable of a phrase usually gets the strongest stress.

Phonotactics

Sondiv's syllables generally follow a (C)V(C) structure, but some words end with underlying 2-consonant clusters whose second consonant is only pronounced if a word beginning with a vowel immediately follows and is a part of the same constituent, otherwise they are silent. Similarly, a Sondiv word may end with /h/, which is only pronounced if a word beginning with a vowel immediately follows, otherwise it stays silent.

Many Sondiv stems start with consonant clusters, but since stems do not appear without a prefix, these clusters can never appear word-initially. Most consonants can appear twice in a row, and some vowel sequences can also occur, there are no diphthongs, however. In consonant clusters, the first consonant agrees in voicing with the second.

Syllables may not end with a nasal consonant, since all syllable-final nasals were deleted after the vowels before them became nasalized. Words may not end with /z/, as /z/ merged with /s/ word-finally, /h/ does not appear after consonants, /j/ does not appear before /i/ and turns into /ʒ/ when this happens, and /w/ does not appear before /u/ and turns into /v/ when this happens.

The question particle yen is pronounced /jen/ before a word beginning with a vowel if both are emphasized, but if only yen is emphasized, it is always pronounced /jɛ̃/.