Appendix:Irathient pronunciation

From The Languages of David J. Peterson
Revision as of 15:29, 27 January 2021 by Wm.annis (talk | contribs) (a few spelling tidbits; word stress)
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Standard Orthography

Irathient IPA English example Notes
a ɑ father
ai ɑɪ̯ nice
b b bad
d d deck
e ɛ get never like a in gate
ei ɛɪ̯? e? gate never like get
ə ə sofa
f f feather only used in borrowed words, not native to Irathient
g g goat never as in genius
gy ɟ close to joke, eggyolk used for /j/ in borrowed words
h h hop always pronounced, even if at end of a word (except for sh and th digraphs)
w ʍ when
i i machine
k kite
l l love always clear, never velarized "dark" [ɫ]
m m matter
n n never
ng ŋ sing can occur at the start of a word; never as in anger
ngg ŋg anger
ny ɲ onion
o o (oʊ̯?) hope
p pike
r r Spanish perro may reduce to tap in some clusters
s s sad
sh ʃ shack used for [tʃ] when borrowing words
t take
th θ thin never as in that
u u crude
v v very
w w war
z z zebra

In some online sources /ɑ/ is spelled aa and the schwa /ə/ is spelled with a single a, as in aarko (DJP Tumblr). In that system the diphthong ai is spelled aai.

Word Stress

  • Most words are stressed on the penultimate syllable.
  • If a word ends in ə the stress is antepenultimate.
  • Imperatives involve an accent shift towards the end of the word; ǝthít! go! (S1E1)
  • Borrowed words may have an irregular stress accent.

In dialog meant for actors, the stress is always indicated with an acute accent.