Tengarsa: Phonology
May. 26th, 2011 02:20 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Consonants
Most come in pairs, there is one triad of them, and then a quartet of isolates. The pairs are unvoiced-voiced pairs. The isolates are often put together as an additional pair when paired-consonants can serve a grammatical function.
Pairs:
f , v
p , b
t , d
k , g
h , th
s , sh
Triad:
m , n , j
(m , n , ʤ)
Isolates:
r
l
y
w
The y and w are mostly present as wedges between strings of vowels and rarely make appearances as their own, separate consonants. On the rare occasions they do make appearances as their own independent consonants (particularly at the beginning of words), the w usually takes on a hw sounds (usually spelled wh in English). The y, mean while, will usually start to resemble more of a yj or yzh sound, or in IPA a slurring together of the y and a very soft ʒ.
The arrangement of consonants can streamline certain grammatical functions (i.e. the first consonant of adjectives often ‘switch off’ within a pair for different adjective strengths).
Vowels
There are short vowels, long ones, and diphthongs
Short:
a (æ)
aw (a)
e/eh (ɛ)
ih (ɪ)
Long:
i (iː)
o (o)
ai (aɪ)
u (uː)
ei (e)
Diphthongs:
ao (or aʊ)
ia (iæ)
ie (iɛ)
ea (ɛæ)
aie (aɪɛ)
ua (ua)
ue (uɛ)
ui (ui)
Vowel lengths are often used for grammatical purposes, especially in verbs.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-28 02:07 am (UTC)For me my Spanglish confusion is mostly the natural type that comes from living in highly-Hispanic areas most of my life, so I tend to default on "hola" and "adios" over hi and goodbye, ect ect,
And, that Chinese one, I think I know that one! (..."do you speak Chinese?", right?)
And feel free to babble. (Do you have Yahoo or Google IM? We can chat, then)