Appendix:Vōv pronunciation

From The Languages of David J. Peterson
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Vōv Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary

The Vōv language has 13 consonants, 6 short vowels and 5 long vowels.

Standard Romanization

Letter IPA English example Notes
a a father
ā father, but longer
b b bog
d d dog
e e bait
ē bait, but longer
ǝ ǝ sofa
g g good
h h ham
i i beet
ī beet, but longer
k k skill
l l left
m m man
n n no
o o coat
ō coat, but longer
q q - Like a [k] but further back in the mouth.
r r - Spanish perro
s s see
t t stop
u u rude
ū rude, but longer
v v voice

Phonetics

Vōv's [ǝ] is a phoneme with equal status to all the other vowels.

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal m n
Plosive voiceless t k q
voiced b d g
Fricative voiceless s h
voiced v
Lateral l
Trill r

Vowels

Vōv has 6 phonetically distinct short vowels, but only 5 phonetically distinct long vowels:

Front Central Back
Close i, ī [iː] u, ū [uː]
Mid e, ē [eː] ǝ o, ō [oː]
Open a, ā [aː]

Phonotactics

Vōv's syllables have a (C)(C)V(C) structure, vowel sequences are allowed. Consonant clusters rarely occur root-initially, but several frequent prefixes only consist of a consonant and therefore result in most of Vōv's word-initial clusters when added to roots beginning with consonants.