User:Bukkia/sandboxVIII: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 37: Line 37:
The group of the plosive consonants is essentially scarce. It distinguishes two sub-groups: ''voiceless'' and ''voiced'', and the voiced sub-group includes the phoneme [g] alone.
The group of the plosive consonants is essentially scarce. It distinguishes two sub-groups: ''voiceless'' and ''voiced'', and the voiced sub-group includes the phoneme [g] alone.


The group of the fricative consonants is overall well developed, although less rich, like the group of the nasal and of the liquid consonants. The glottal consonant, [ʔ], while formally a plosive, is traditionally included in the fricative group. The phonemes [j] and [w] have a full consonantal value and they are never regarded as semivowels.
The group of the nasal and of the liquid consonants is similarly scarce, but anyway quite developed. The group of the fricative is substantially richer in number of phonemes and points of articulation.  
 
The phoneme [w] can have both semivocalic and consonantal value, while the phoneme [j] has always a full consonantal value and it is never regarded as a semivowel.

Revision as of 13:47, 14 April 2025

Main article: Iðâɣ

This page gives an extensive description of Iðâɣ phonological features.

Consonants

The consonant system distinguishes 20 phonemes, traditionally arranged in the following scheme:

IPA
Transcription
plosive voiceless
[p]
[k]
[t]
p
k
t
voiced
[g]
g
nasal
[m]
[n]
m
n
liquid
[r]
[l]
r
l
fricative dental
[ð]
ð
sibilant
[s]
s
alveolar
[ʃ]
š
glottal
[h]
h
palatal
[ç]
ç
bilabial
[ɸ]
[β]
ɸ
β
velar
[x]
[ɣ]
x
ɣ
approximant
[j]
[w]
j
w
affricate
[ʧ]
č

The group of the plosive consonants is essentially scarce. It distinguishes two sub-groups: voiceless and voiced, and the voiced sub-group includes the phoneme [g] alone.

The group of the nasal and of the liquid consonants is similarly scarce, but anyway quite developed. The group of the fricative is substantially richer in number of phonemes and points of articulation.

The phoneme [w] can have both semivocalic and consonantal value, while the phoneme [j] has always a full consonantal value and it is never regarded as a semivowel.