baklvon wrote:
stops /t d k g/ <t d k g>
fricatives /v ts z ʃ ȝ x/ <v tz z q zh x>
nasals /m n ñ ŋ/ <m n ñ ng>
liquids /l r/ <l r>
approximants /w j/ <w j>
syllabic consonants /l r w j/ <l r w j>
vowels /ɪ ɛ æ u o a/ <i he ae u o a>
nasal vowels /ɪ ɛ/ <ii e>
unrounded vowels /ɯ ɤ/ <ü ö>
Made a few categorical changes that I was lazy with. Does that clear it up a bit?
unrounded vowels don't form a separate category from regular vowels. also be careful to put the nasal symbol on the nasal vowels otherwise it's unclear.
i would write it like:
vowels /ɪ ɛ æ ɯ u ɤ o a/ <i he ae ü u ö o a>
nasal vowels /ɪ̃ ɛ̃/ <ii e>
that said, there are some odd orthographical choices, particularly <he>, and the fact that there's no consistent way to distinguish nasal and regular vowels (i would write the nasal vowels ĩ and ẽ or in and en), and the fact that ü and ö would usually be interpreted as rounded front vowels rather than unrounded back vowels. that's not to say you
can't use them that way, just that personally i think you'd be better off using a different diacritic.
ɯ is usually written ı (eg Turkish), ư (eg Vietnamese), or eu (eg Korean romanization). ɤ isn't a very common vowel – it's written e in Mandarin romanization and eo in Korean romanization, but o, ö, oe are also found. Vietnamese also has ơ, which I presume is originally ɤ but is now a long schwa (because those sounds aren't very distinct). So you could have <ư ơ> for /ɯ ɤ/. Another option is to write /ɯ ɤ/ as <u o> and /u o/ with diacritics eg <û ô> or whatever.