Appendix:Dothraki pronunciation

From The Languages of David J. Peterson
Revision as of 23:47, 6 January 2020 by Djp (talk | contribs) (Djp moved page appendix:Dothraki pronunciation to Appendix:Dothraki pronunciation over redirect: revert)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Dothraki language has 20 consonants, 4 vowels and 2 glides.

Standard Romanization

Dothraki IPA Informal English example Notes
a a aah father
ch t͡ʃ ch check
d d dog dental
e e e play "Then" would be pronounced as [e]. [e] makes the sound in say and great
f f ff fool
g g g good
h h hh ham
i i ee machine
j d͡ʒ j judge
k k k kill
kh x x Bach
l ll left dental
m m mm man, ham
n nn no, tin dental
o o oh toe Not as a diphthong. Said like the Minnesota "o"
q q k
r ɾ, r rr trilled when at the beginning of the word and followed by a vowel; at the end of the word; when doubled; tap medially elsewhere
s s ss see, city
sh ʃ shh ship
t t stop, top dental
th θ th thin
v v vuh voice, have
w w wuh wave, dowager
y j y yes
z z zz zoo
zh ʒ azure

Apart from names, the letters p, b, u and x do not appear in the romanization of diagetically modern Dothraki, and c appears only in the digraph ch.

Geminates

For phonemes that are marked with digraph, the geminate has a reduced romanization, e.g. kkh instead of khkh. This does not affect the pronunciation; these are geminates just as any others.

Dothraki IPA Never
kkh xx *kx
ssh ʃʃ *sʃ
tth θθ *tθ
zzh ʒʒ *zʒ
cch tt͡ʃ

Consonants

Dothraki has 22 consonant phonemes. The IPA pronunciation symbol is indicated in square brackets when different from the standard romanization:

Consonnants of Dothraki
Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal m

|| n []

Plosive/Affricate voiceless t [] ch [t͡ʃ] k

|| q ||

voiced d [] j [d͡ʒ] ɡ

|| ||

Fricative voiceless f

|| th [θ]

s

|| sh [ʃ]

kh [x] h [h
~ ħ

]

voiced v

|| || z || zh [ʒ]

Approximant w

|| l []

y [j]
Rhotic r [r
~ ɾ

] || || || ||

The digraphs kh, sh, th and zh are all fricatives, while ch and j are affricates.

Doubled consonants are always pronounced geminated.

Allophones of consonnants

As in any natural or naturalistic language, there are some phones in Dothraki that are considered—and even heard—the same with each other.

Complementary Distribution

Some phonemes change according to the surrounding phones, to ease the pronunciation.

  • In syllable-final position, h [h] shifts to [ħ]
  • Stop produced at the same region of mouth as the fricative following it changes to geminate of the fricative. This can occur when words are derived, especially when compounds are formed. The changed consonant cluster is marked in the romanization.

Free Variation

There is no definite line between complementary distribution and free variation; some variation happens always when the surrounding phones call for it, some may happen. Some variation is indifferent of the surrounding phones.

  • While Dothraki has no labial plosives, [p] or [b], both of these have been available in the past and have developed into [f] and [v], respectively. The [p] and [b] phones can still be met as free variants of f [f] and v [v], and should generally go unnoticed.
  • Voiceless stops, t [t], k [k] and q [q] even ch [t͡ʃ] may be aspirated.

Vowels

Dothraki has four vowel phonemes:

Vowels of Dothraki
Front Back
Close i [i]
Mid e [e] o [o]
Open a [a]

There are no diphthongs or long vowels.

Allophones of vowels

With only four vowel phonemes, Dothraki vowels have more room to shift than in other languages. They should be treated as little less precisely placed than vowels in English. Because the sound [q] is produced far in the throat, vowels immediately following [q] undergo a considerable shift:

Vowel shift
Normal After q
i e
e ɛ
o ɔ
a ɑ

Relevant Information Elsewhere