Actually, isn't that what happened in Old or Proto Norse?finlay wrote:That works too. Your neutralisation of z/ɹ intervocalically is still a good change, for example.
Post your conlang's phonology
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
It's happened a few times. Northern and Western Germanic is one instance. The other well-known one (actually I've never seen it described elsewhere, maybe it's just these two?) is Latin, which had *s > *z > r between vowels (thus genus~generis)8Deer wrote:Actually, isn't that what happened in Old or Proto Norse?finlay wrote:That works too. Your neutralisation of z/ɹ intervocalically is still a good change, for example.
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
My second conlang, Rimelsó:
Consonants:
m n ɲ ŋ
p t tʃ k q '
ph th tʃh kh qh
p' t' tʃ' k' q'
mb nd ɲdʒ ŋg
(pf) (ts) (kx) (qχ)
(tsh)
s ʃ h
(v) (z) (ʒ) (ɣ)
w y
r
(ɾ)
l ʎ
Vowels:
i(ĩ) u(ũ)
e o
ɛ(ɛ̃) ɔ(ɔ̃)
æ ɑ
Sounds in parentheses are allophones only.
Syllable structure:
(C)V(:)(N)(r|L)(C)
On the surface, Standard Rimelsó only permits r, l, or ľ plus a consonant in the coda; any nasal element other than a single syllable-final nasal nasalizes the vowel and falls. The semivowels w and y are not permitted at the end of a syllable; historically they formed diphthongs that became monophthongs, but they resurface if a suffix beginning with a vowel is added.
Vowels are also nasalized if they precede a prenasalized consonant.
The Tési dialect has merged the prenasalized series into the tenuis series, but retains the nasalized vowels; nasalization is phonemic in Tési.
This phonological inventory doesn't cover the allophonic lenition within words; I'm still working out the rules governing clusters, especially word-final clusters which have to shed consonants.
I have problems with the orthography. Not the sounds, which are easy enough to write although leading to horribly unintuitive results, like <boquuʼ> /mbɔhuːʔ/, but whether to write words more phonemically or morpho-phonemically. "To a man" is *ras-m, and pronounced /rɔ̃s/ in the standard dialect, but there are about equally good cases for spelling it <rǫs> (how it is pronounced), <rans> (how it is pronounced in conservative dialects), and <rasm> (unpronounceable in any dialect but clearly showing the morphology). I'm currently leaning towards a heavily morphophonemic orthography because a sensible phonemic orthography is still of little help to someone who doesn't know Rimelsó spelling conventions.
Consonants:
m n ɲ ŋ
p t tʃ k q '
ph th tʃh kh qh
p' t' tʃ' k' q'
mb nd ɲdʒ ŋg
(pf) (ts) (kx) (qχ)
(tsh)
s ʃ h
(v) (z) (ʒ) (ɣ)
w y
r
(ɾ)
l ʎ
Vowels:
i(ĩ) u(ũ)
e o
ɛ(ɛ̃) ɔ(ɔ̃)
æ ɑ
Sounds in parentheses are allophones only.
Syllable structure:
(C)V(:)(N)(r|L)(C)
On the surface, Standard Rimelsó only permits r, l, or ľ plus a consonant in the coda; any nasal element other than a single syllable-final nasal nasalizes the vowel and falls. The semivowels w and y are not permitted at the end of a syllable; historically they formed diphthongs that became monophthongs, but they resurface if a suffix beginning with a vowel is added.
Vowels are also nasalized if they precede a prenasalized consonant.
The Tési dialect has merged the prenasalized series into the tenuis series, but retains the nasalized vowels; nasalization is phonemic in Tési.
This phonological inventory doesn't cover the allophonic lenition within words; I'm still working out the rules governing clusters, especially word-final clusters which have to shed consonants.
I have problems with the orthography. Not the sounds, which are easy enough to write although leading to horribly unintuitive results, like <boquuʼ> /mbɔhuːʔ/, but whether to write words more phonemically or morpho-phonemically. "To a man" is *ras-m, and pronounced /rɔ̃s/ in the standard dialect, but there are about equally good cases for spelling it <rǫs> (how it is pronounced), <rans> (how it is pronounced in conservative dialects), and <rasm> (unpronounceable in any dialect but clearly showing the morphology). I'm currently leaning towards a heavily morphophonemic orthography because a sensible phonemic orthography is still of little help to someone who doesn't know Rimelsó spelling conventions.
Calakei gasu ga Ľikala, yau ciṙiwalau gasu ga Ľizeṙe ľi. - Hataučai Ihirašahai Tewa
Conworld Code: Gsff S2 Dnho O3 Tis CL++ SE3 CD3 CC3 CO3 E4 Pfb
Conworld Code: Gsff S2 Dnho O3 Tis CL++ SE3 CD3 CC3 CO3 E4 Pfb
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
An inventory:
Problematic? There are some unusual consonants (θ n̟ ħ) for such a small inventory, but I've got all the vanilla with no gaps.
EDIT: changed the IPA symbols for the interdental nasal.
Code: Select all
p t k
b d g
θ s ħ
m n̟ n
ɾ
j w
i e a u o
EDIT: changed the IPA symbols for the interdental nasal.
Last edited by cromulant on Mon Feb 13, 2012 5:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Nothing is unusual with those consonants - inventories don't have needs based on size.cromulant wrote:An inventory:
Problematic? There are some unusual consonants (θ n̪ ħ) for such a small inventory, but I've got all the vanilla with no gaps.Code: Select all
p t k b d g θ s ħ m n̪ n ɾ j w i e a u o
What do you mean by vanilla? I like strawberry more
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Re: Post your conlang's phonology
That's not quite true. Less common consonants tend to be found in larger inventories, and absent from smaller ones.Wattmann wrote:Nothing is unusual with those consonants - inventories don't have needs based on size.cromulant wrote:An inventory:
Problematic? There are some unusual consonants (θ n̪ ħ) for such a small inventory, but I've got all the vanilla with no gaps.Code: Select all
p t k b d g θ s ħ m n̪ n ɾ j w i e a u o
http://wals.info/chapter/19
^The last two paragraphs are the relevant part.
By that I mean the plain, basic phonemes like /p t k m n s/ without which I probably couldn't have the more exotic stuff. For example, I probably wouldn't have /n̪/ without /n/, or /θ ħ/ without /s/. Languages overwhelmingly fill up all the vanilla before moving on to the strawberry.Wattmann wrote:What do you mean by vanilla? I like strawberry more
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
That's true only for phonemes.By that I mean the plain, basic phonemes like /p t k m n s/ without which I probably couldn't have the more exotic stuff. For example, I probably wouldn't have /n̪/ without /n/
E.g. Polish /n t d/ are usually [n̪ t̪ d̪] respectively (and may be described as /n̪ t̪ d̪/ without /n t d/).
The conlanger formerly known as “the conlanger formerly known as Pole, the”.
If we don't study the mistakes of the future we're doomed to repeat them for the first time.
If we don't study the mistakes of the future we're doomed to repeat them for the first time.
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
The inventory I posted has a phonemic alveolar/interdental contrast in the nasals and fricatives. Sorry, I /n̪/'ed when I should have /n̟/'ed.
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
8Deer wrote:Unnamed
/p t k kʷ/
/ts tɕ/
/s ð ɕ x ɣ xʷ/
/l ɹ j w/
/m n ɲ ŋ ŋʷ/
/a e i o u ɨ/
/ai au/
All vowels have a length contrast except /ɨ/
Allophony:
Stops before a stressed syllable are aspirated.
/ɣ/ is /ŋ/ intervocalically.
/*ɣʷ/ merged with /w/.
/ð/ is [ɹ] intervocalically.
/x/ is pronounced /h/ by many speakers intervocallically.
Phonotactics:
(C)(C)V(C), where the second consonant is a fricative or a resonant (haven't fully worked out which clusters are allowed).
This language is an isolate spoken in Siberia, so I'm trying to get a Siberian flavour with it.
Wattmann wrote:the problem is your /ð/ - a /θ/ is far more likely there (it's not an actual problem, but somewhat bugging - do consult with other members)
Having /ð/ without /θ/ and /x ɣ/ as the only voicing contrast are both attested in languages of western Siberia. The consonant inventory of Northern Mansi, for example, is:finlay wrote:Also, x~ɣ is the only voicing contrast in your language – I'd be a bit hesitant about that as well, although there's nothing wrong with it per se.
/p t k kʷ/
/s ʃ ɕ x xʷ/
/m n ɲ ŋ ŋʷ/
/l ʎ r j ɣ w/
Not that there's anything wrong with having /z/, either (but I think it's quite a bit rarer than /ɣ/ in Siberia; it's found in Mongolic at least, but eg. Northern Turkic languages tend to have *z → s.).
OTOH what is not all that Siberian in feel is a (C)(C)V(C) syllable structure, and phonemic difthongs. I think pretty much all languages around there rather have (C)V(C)(C) and monofthongs only.
…Also if both /w/ and /ŋ/ are independant consonants tho, how is /ɣʷ/ "merged with" the former, but /ɣ/ is "allophonically" the latter?
[ˌʔaɪsəˈpʰɻ̊ʷoʊpɪɫ ˈʔæɫkəɦɔɫ]
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Simple?Tropylium wrote: …Also if both /w/ and /ŋ/ are independant consonants tho, how is /ɣʷ/ "merged with" the former, but /ɣ/ is "allophonically" the latter?
*ɣʷ
ɣ ~ ŋ
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Re: Post your conlang's phonology
This one corrected stands.cromulant wrote: http://wals.info/chapter/19
^The last two paragraphs are the relevant part.
By that I mean the plain, basic phonemes like /p t k m n s/ without which I probably couldn't have the more exotic stuff. For example, I probably wouldn't have /n̪/ without /n/, or /θ ħ/ without /s/. Languages overwhelmingly fill up all the vanilla before moving on to the strawberry.Wattmann wrote:What do you mean by vanilla? I like strawberry more
I tend to leave various things out of the vanilla before going strawberry :3
Warning: Recovering bilingual, attempting trilinguaility. Knowledge of French left behind in childhood. Currently repairing bilinguality. Repair stalled. Above content may be a touch off.
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Well, cromulant's statement is probably best applied to various MOAs separately; it's nothing too surprizing to have /p t ts tʃ k kʷ/ × a few phonations, and yet not more than 3-4 sonorants (out of the "vanilla" /m n l r j w/).Wattmann wrote:I tend to leave various things out of the vanilla before going strawberry :3cromulant wrote:Languages overwhelmingly fill up all the vanilla before moving on to the strawberry.
It is unusual (altho not necessarily completely impossible) to have /kp/ without /p/, /ŋ/ without /m/, /ɭ/ without /l/, etc.
[ˌʔaɪsəˈpʰɻ̊ʷoʊpɪɫ ˈʔæɫkəɦɔɫ]
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
I tend to leave out labials, and make nasals either only barely phonemic or batshit rich (five POAs, glottalisation, length)Tropylium wrote:Well, cromulant's statement is probably best applied to various MOAs separately; it's nothing too surprizing to have /p t ts tʃ k kʷ/ × a few phonations, and yet not more than 3-4 sonorants (out of the "vanilla" /m n l r j w/).Wattmann wrote:I tend to leave various things out of the vanilla before going strawberry :3cromulant wrote:Languages overwhelmingly fill up all the vanilla before moving on to the strawberry.
It is unusual (altho not necessarily completely impossible) to have /kp/ without /p/, /ŋ/ without /m/, /ɭ/ without /l/, etc.
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Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Made a small phonology based on the stuff written above and left out /n/ to give it a certain flavour.
Code: Select all
/p[p] pv[p_>] pp[p:] t[t'] tt[t:] ts[ts] c[tS] cc[tS:] k[k] kv[k_>] kk[k:] kw[k_w]/
/m[m] g[n'] gw[n'_w] l[l] r[r] j[j] w[w]/
/s[s] ss[s:] h[h] hw[h_w]/
(C)V(C)(C)If I stop posting out of the blue it probably is because my computer and the board won't cooperate and let me log in.!
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
The way I understand it is, ɣʷ doesn't exist anymore because it merged with w, while ɣ and ŋ are still distinctive in the initial and/or final position. The proper terminology for the second type is a "neutralization", by the way, if two sounds are distinctive in one position and not distinctive in another. The best RL example of this is when you have a language with /n m/ as its nasal phonemes and [ŋ] only before velars. It's theoretically impossible to assign [ŋ] as /n/ or as /m/, because neither [n] nor [m] appears before a velar – the two phonemes are neutralized.Tropylium wrote: …Also if both /w/ and /ŋ/ are independant consonants tho, how is /ɣʷ/ "merged with" the former, but /ɣ/ is "allophonically" the latter?
If you have two sounds, ɣ and ŋ for instance, one of which appears in one position and the other in another position, then you have a very basic example of one phoneme with two allophones. As it stands, I know that ɣ and ŋ aren't distinctive intervocalically for 8Deer's language, but I don't know about other positions – ŋ is a very commonly disallowed in initial position, for example, and it could be that ɣ is disallowed in the final position, making it one phoneme with [ɣ] initially and [ŋ] interv./finally. You could even have the distinction only crop up in one place, such as the final position.
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Altho if they do contrast, I see no reason to analyze medial [ŋ] as a neutralization of /ɣ ŋ/ rather than as simply /ŋ/; what association does this have with /ɣ/ anymore? Couldn't we equally well claim that it's actually medial [x] that is a neutralization of /ɣ x/?finlay wrote:The way I understand it is, ɣʷ doesn't exist anymore because it merged with w, while ɣ and ŋ are still distinctive in the initial and/or final position. The proper terminology for the second type is a "neutralization", by the way, if two sounds are distinctive in one position and not distinctive in another. The best RL example of this is when you have a language with /n m/ as its nasal phonemes and [ŋ] only before velars. It's theoretically impossible to assign [ŋ] as /n/ or as /m/, because neither [n] nor [m] appears before a velar – the two phonemes are neutralized.Tropylium wrote: …Also if both /w/ and /ŋ/ are independant consonants tho, how is /ɣʷ/ "merged with" the former, but /ɣ/ is "allophonically" the latter?
If you have two sounds, ɣ and ŋ for instance, one of which appears in one position and the other in another position, then you have a very basic example of one phoneme with two allophones. As it stands, I know that ɣ and ŋ aren't distinctive intervocalically for 8Deer's language, but I don't know about other positions – ŋ is a very commonly disallowed in initial position, for example, and it could be that ɣ is disallowed in the final position, making it one phoneme with [ɣ] initially and [ŋ] interv./finally. You could even have the distinction only crop up in one place, such as the final position.
I could understand if the point was a change from medial *ɣ to /ŋ/, but this change was explicitly listed as allophonic and not historical (unlike the *ɣʷ → w change).
[ˌʔaɪsəˈpʰɻ̊ʷoʊpɪɫ ˈʔæɫkəɦɔɫ]
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
If they alternate, then you've definitely got a neutralization or allophony situation. That's pretty much how it works...Tropylium wrote:Altho if they do contrast, I see no reason to analyze medial [ŋ] as a neutralization of /ɣ ŋ/ rather than as simply /ŋ/; what association does this have with /ɣ/ anymore? Couldn't we equally well claim that it's actually medial [x] that is a neutralization of /ɣ x/?finlay wrote:The way I understand it is, ɣʷ doesn't exist anymore because it merged with w, while ɣ and ŋ are still distinctive in the initial and/or final position. The proper terminology for the second type is a "neutralization", by the way, if two sounds are distinctive in one position and not distinctive in another. The best RL example of this is when you have a language with /n m/ as its nasal phonemes and [ŋ] only before velars. It's theoretically impossible to assign [ŋ] as /n/ or as /m/, because neither [n] nor [m] appears before a velar – the two phonemes are neutralized.Tropylium wrote: …Also if both /w/ and /ŋ/ are independant consonants tho, how is /ɣʷ/ "merged with" the former, but /ɣ/ is "allophonically" the latter?
If you have two sounds, ɣ and ŋ for instance, one of which appears in one position and the other in another position, then you have a very basic example of one phoneme with two allophones. As it stands, I know that ɣ and ŋ aren't distinctive intervocalically for 8Deer's language, but I don't know about other positions – ŋ is a very commonly disallowed in initial position, for example, and it could be that ɣ is disallowed in the final position, making it one phoneme with [ɣ] initially and [ŋ] interv./finally. You could even have the distinction only crop up in one place, such as the final position.
I could understand if the point was a change from medial *ɣ to /ŋ/, but this change was explicitly listed as allophonic and not historical (unlike the *ɣʷ → w change).
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sirdanilot
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Re: Post your conlang's phonology
The only remarkable things here are ħ and perhaps the absence of t̪ d̪ (thouɡh they could have become θ or merɡed with their alveolar counterparts or something). But how to explain the pharyngeal? Perhaps the pharyngeal used to be part of a series of pharyngealized stops, which have since disappeared (perhaps leaving a lot of a's and o's behind, as pharyngeals like to do) except for the ħ. This seems the most plausible explanation. One would perhaps expect /q/ and /ɢ/ then, or remnants of those.cromulant wrote:An inventory:
Problematic? There are some unusual consonants (θ n̟ ħ) for such a small inventory, but I've got all the vanilla with no gaps.Code: Select all
p t k b d g θ s ħ m n̟ n ɾ j w i e a u o
EDIT: changed the IPA symbols for the interdental nasal.
Also, /f/ is missing but why the hell no if it floats your boat?
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
I don't see how either of these is a problem. You can have a pharyngeal fricative without a pharyngealized stop series (the UPSID list of languages with voiceless pharyngeal fricatives includes a number with no other pharyngeal(ized) consonants, although in a lot of cases their analysis seems to be based on older studies and not actually correct...nonetheless, see for instance Kurdish)--what's odder is to have such a situation in a language with a relatively small phoneme inventory overall. But I still think it's perfectly doable. And lacking /f/ while having other fricatives isn't even a little bit odd. In fact, the fricative inventory here is close to that of Karajá, which also serves as a good illustration that smallish inventories can still be fucking nutso.sirdanilot wrote:But how to explain the pharyngeal? Perhaps the pharyngeal used to be part of a series of pharyngealized stops, which have since disappeared (perhaps leaving a lot of a's and o's behind, as pharyngeals like to do) except for the ħ. This seems the most plausible explanation. One would perhaps expect /q/ and /ɢ/ then, or remnants of those.
Also, /f/ is missing but why the hell no if it floats your boat?
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Just had a strike of inspiration for a phoneme inventory:
/m n ɳ/ <m n ṇ>
/pʰ tʰ tʼ ʈʰ kʰ kʼ ʔ/ <p t d ṭ k g ʔ>
/ʈʂʼ tɬ’ kx/ <ḍ l q>
/θ ð ʂ χ/ <s z ṣ x>
/j ɭ ɰ/ <y r w>
/ɑ e i o u/ <a e i o u>
/ɑ: i: u:/ <ā ē ō>
A few things I'm debating about:
-getting rid of /ð/. I feel like it doesn't fit in with this inventory. But that's just me. Also the whole "only one set of voicing contrasts" thing
-adding /f/, to better explain the lack of /pʼ/...I know /pʼ/ isn't terribly common, even in langs with ejectives, but I feel like it would be better to have /pʼ/ > (pf >) f. My only hesitation is that contrasting /f θ/ would be weird [yes, I'm aware standard English is an obvious example of a lang that does, but English also has like 58731935103 fricatives anyway...]
Also: what about /ʈʂʼ/? Wikipedia says it's attested in 2 languages, but then when I go to their pages, one doesn't have it listed in its phoneme inventory (it has /tʃʼ/), and one has a sparse page that doesn't even have a consonant inventory on it...
Also also: is it weird to have /ɳ/ without /ŋ/?
/m n ɳ/ <m n ṇ>
/pʰ tʰ tʼ ʈʰ kʰ kʼ ʔ/ <p t d ṭ k g ʔ>
/ʈʂʼ tɬ’ kx/ <ḍ l q>
/θ ð ʂ χ/ <s z ṣ x>
/j ɭ ɰ/ <y r w>
/ɑ e i o u/ <a e i o u>
/ɑ: i: u:/ <ā ē ō>
A few things I'm debating about:
-getting rid of /ð/. I feel like it doesn't fit in with this inventory. But that's just me. Also the whole "only one set of voicing contrasts" thing
-adding /f/, to better explain the lack of /pʼ/...I know /pʼ/ isn't terribly common, even in langs with ejectives, but I feel like it would be better to have /pʼ/ > (pf >) f. My only hesitation is that contrasting /f θ/ would be weird [yes, I'm aware standard English is an obvious example of a lang that does, but English also has like 58731935103 fricatives anyway...]
Also: what about /ʈʂʼ/? Wikipedia says it's attested in 2 languages, but then when I go to their pages, one doesn't have it listed in its phoneme inventory (it has /tʃʼ/), and one has a sparse page that doesn't even have a consonant inventory on it...
Also also: is it weird to have /ɳ/ without /ŋ/?
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
I don't think so.Also also: is it weird to have /ɳ/ without /ŋ/?
Also,
Edit: /tʰ tʼ/ are dental here, aren't they?
The conlanger formerly known as “the conlanger formerly known as Pole, the”.
If we don't study the mistakes of the future we're doomed to repeat them for the first time.
If we don't study the mistakes of the future we're doomed to repeat them for the first time.
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Wikipedia is stupid, and contradicts itself in several places on this question. It also conflicts, sort of, with UPSID's database. Anyway, look no further than the Mamean languages (and some other Mayan languages, such as Jacaltec) for several examples of languages with /ʈʂʼ/.Chibi wrote:Also: what about /ʈʂʼ/? Wikipedia says it's attested in 2 languages, but then when I go to their pages, one doesn't have it listed in its phoneme inventory (it has /tʃʼ/), and one has a sparse page that doesn't even have a consonant inventory on it...
EDIT:
No it wouldn't. Unless you've got contrastive interdental and dental non-sibilant fricatives, there's no need to specify the contrast in phonemic notation. And in any case it's perfectly natural to have interdental fricatives corresponding to a dental stop series (or even, in addition to alveolar stop and fricative series, or some other such combination)Feles wrote:/ð/ would fit better changed to /ð̞/, though.
EDIT2:
It's unusual, but certainly not impossible or unattested (take Hungarian)Chibi wrote:Also also: is it weird to have /ɳ/ without /ŋ/?
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Uh, NO?Whimemsz wrote:It's unusual, but certainly not impossible or unattested (take Hungarian)Chibi wrote:Also also: is it weird to have /ɳ/ without /ŋ/?
That's palatal, this' retroflex.
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Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Shit, you're right. It's not my fault the two symbols are so similar, though, someone should do something about that >:|
Anyway, my actual point is still correct (see Pashto)
Anyway, my actual point is still correct (see Pashto)
Re: Post your conlang's phonology
Whimemsz wrote:Shit, you're right. It's not my fault the two symbols are so similar, though, someone should do something about that >:|
Anyway, my actual point is still correct (see Pashto)
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