Appendix:Kezhwa pronunciation: Difference between revisions

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=== Stress ===
=== Stress ===
Kezhwa words are stressed on one of their last three syllabes, or, in other words, it cannot fall on a syllable before the last three. Most commonly, stress falls on the penultimate syllable, and in this case the stress is not marked in the romanization. If the stress falls on the final syllable or the antepenult, it is marked in the romanization with an acute accent over the vowel.  
Kezhwa words are stressed on one of their last three syllabes, or, in other words, stress cannot fall on a syllable before the last three. Most commonly, stress falls on the penultimate syllable, and in this case the stress is not marked in the romanization. If the stress falls on the final syllable or the antepenult, it is marked in the romanization with an acute accent over the vowel.  


By default, a syllable of the root is stressed. Any syllable in the root may carry stress, and which syllable is stressed is unique to each root, i.e. lexical to some extent. The main stress does not move when suffixes are added to the root, unless it would end up falling before the antepenultimate syllable after suffixes are added. In that case, the stress is moved to the antepenult.
By default, a syllable of the root is stressed. Any syllable in the root may carry stress, and which syllable is stressed is unique to each root, i.e. lexical to some extent. The main stress does not move when suffixes are added to the root, unless it would end up falling before the antepenultimate syllable after suffixes are added. In that case, the stress is moved to the antepenult.

Revision as of 03:27, 26 March 2024

Kezhwa Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary, Dialogue

The Kezhwa language has 21 consonants and 5 vowels.

Standard Romanization

Letter IPA English example Notes
a a/ə father or sofa [a] when stressed, [ə] otherwise
b b bog
d d dog
dh ð this
e e/ɛ gate or get [ɛ] in closed syllables, [e] otherwise
f f fog
g g good
i i beet
k k skill Always unaspirated
l l left
m m man
n n no
o o/ɔ tote or law [ɔ] in closed syllables, [o] otherwise
p p span Always unaspirated
r ɾ battle
s s see
sh ʃ shade
t t stop Always unaspirated
th θ thing
u u rude
v v voice
w w wet
y j yet
z z zoo
zh ʒ azure
ʔ uh-oh

Phonetics

Consonants

Labial Coronal Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m /m/ n /n/
Plosive voiceless p /p/ t /t/ k /k/ ' /ʔ/
voiced b /b/ d /d/ g /g/
Fricative voiceless f /f/ th /θ/, s /s/ sh /ʃ/
voiced v /v/ dh /ð/, z /z/ zh /ʒ/
Approximant w /w/ l /l/ y /j/
Tap r /ɾ/

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i /i/ u /u/
Mid e /e~ɛ/ o /o~ɔ/
Open a /a~ə/

Stress

Kezhwa words are stressed on one of their last three syllabes, or, in other words, stress cannot fall on a syllable before the last three. Most commonly, stress falls on the penultimate syllable, and in this case the stress is not marked in the romanization. If the stress falls on the final syllable or the antepenult, it is marked in the romanization with an acute accent over the vowel.

By default, a syllable of the root is stressed. Any syllable in the root may carry stress, and which syllable is stressed is unique to each root, i.e. lexical to some extent. The main stress does not move when suffixes are added to the root, unless it would end up falling before the antepenultimate syllable after suffixes are added. In that case, the stress is moved to the antepenult.

Phonotactics

Kezhwa's syllabes have a (C)(C)V(C) structure, the second consonant of a syllable-initial cluster must be an approximant. Kezhwa does not have diphthongs and does not allow vowel sequences within a word.