PHONOLOGY
/p b t d k g/ p b t d c g
/f v s z x/ f v s z h
/m n ŋ/ m n ng
/r l/ r l
Each consonant has a palatal variant. Palatalization is indicated on the vowel - all consonants around a high vowel are considered palatalized unless an "h" follows the consonant, which marks it as non-palatalizing. A silent "i" is usually added to indicate palatalization where no high vowel is present in speech.
/i ɪ ʊ u/ í i u ú
/e ɛ ə ɔ o/ é e a o ó
/a ɑ/ á a
Multiple diphthongs also exist.
STRESS
Stress almost always falls on the last syllable. Sometimes it doesn't. Words with a final <a> usually have stress on the penultimate syllable.
GRAMMAR
Two cases exist for most words - direct and genitive. Pronouns have three: nominative, accusative, and genitive. There are two genders, masculine and feminine. Here is an example of the nouns deilh "danger", caum "field", and paun "pagan" conjugated in each case:
Code: Select all
SG PL
DIR deilh deilha
GEN del dilhidh
Code: Select all
SG PL
DIR caum cuam
GEN caim camhidh
Code: Select all
SG PL
DIR paun pávan
GEN pain pánhidh
The direct article in the masculine genitive singular case drives lenition and palatalization: caim /kɑmʲ/ "of a field" becomes egaim /ɛgʲɑmʲ/ "of the field"
The direct article in the masculine direct singular invokes nasalization: caum /kɑu̯m/ "a field" becomes iungaum /i̯ʊŋɑu̯m/ "the field"
The direct article in the masculine direct plural spirantizes the root: cuam /ku̯ɑm/ "fields" becomes iohuam /i̯ɔxu̯ɑm/ "the fields"
More to come later.

