Appendix:Ravkan pronunciation

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

Ravkan has 38 consonants, 8 vowels and 2 glides.

Standard Romanization

Letter IPA English example Notes
a a, ə father, sofa Pronounced [ə] in post-tonic syllables, [a] elsewhere.
ai ai lie
b b bath
by beauty
ch watch
d d dog
dy add you
dz dz adze
dzy dzʲ adds you
e e ~ ɛ gate or bet
ei ei ~ ɛi bait
f f food
fy few
g ɡ good
gy ɡʲ gules
i i, ɨ machine, chicken Pronounced [ɨ] in post-tonic syllables, [i] elsewhere.
j jog
k k skill
ky skew
l l left
ly ʎ million
m m man
my mule
n n no Assimilates to a following velar consonant.
ny ɲ onion
o o ~ ɔ, ə lot or coat, sofa Pronounced [ə] in final, post-tonic syllables, [ɔ] elsewhere. Exceptions are found in some compounds.
oi oi ~ ɔi point
p p span
py spew
r ɾ battle
ry ɾʲ medium
s s see
sh ʃ sheep
sy pass you
t t stop
ts ts pits
tsy tsʲ pits you
ty list you
u u rude
v v voice
vy view
w w wet
y j young
z z zone
zh ʒ casual
zy buzz you

Phonetics

Consonants

Ravkan has 38 phonemic consonants and 2 phonemic glides:

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar
plain palatalized plain palatalized plain palatalized
Nasal m my [mʲ] n ny [ɲ] (n [ŋ])
Stop voiceless p py [pʲ] t ty [tʲ] k ky [kʲ]
voiced b by [bʲ] d dy [dʲ] g gy [ɡʲ]
Affricate voiceless ts tsy [tsʲ] ch [tʃ]
voiced dz dzy [dzʲ] j [dʒ]
Fricative voiceless f fy [fʲ] s sy [sʲ] sh [ʃ]
voiced v vy [vʲ] z zy [zʲ] zh [ʒ]
Glide w y [j]
Lateral l ly [ʎ]
Tap r [ɾ] ry [ɾʲ]

Vowels

Ravkan has five phonemic monophthongs:

Front Mid Back
Close i [i ~ ɨ] u
Mid e [e ~ ɛ] o [o ~ ɔ ~ ə]
Open a [a ~ ə]

Diphthongs

Ravkan has three diphthongs: ai [ai], ei [ei ~ ɛi], and oi [oi ~ ɔi].

Stress

Ravkan words can only be stressed on one of the last three syllables of the word (the antepenultimate, the penultimate and the final). Most Ravkan words are stressed on their penultimate syllable, although some are irregularly stressed. Furthermore, some suffixes move stress to the final or antepenultimate syllable. Some of the exceptions are as follows:

  • The word soldat has word-final stress.
  • The suffix -ost attracts stress, making it final.
  • The instrumental singular is stressed finally.
  • Any suffix of the shape -*VyV(C) leaves stress on the antepenultimate.
  • The past tense forms generally leave stress in place. However, past tense forms ending in -uwaya shift stress to the antepenultimate, since it cannot fall before.