Water Language: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Construction/Language}} {{Language | familycolor=#80CCCC | name=Waterspeak | family=Water | dialects= *(Freshwater) *(Saltwater) | script=(Knotted String) }} ==Introduction=...")
 
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===Consonants===
===Consonants===
* z (Eng: 'ruse')
* z (Eng: 'ruse')
* zh (Eng: 'rouge')
* ʒ (Eng: 'rouge')
* n (Eng: 'run')
* n (Eng: 'run')
* ŋ (Eng: 'rung')
* ŋ (Eng: 'rung')
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===Stress===
===Stress===
===Phonotactics===
===Phonotactics===
* BEWARE OF DIPTHONGS. If there's two vowels next to each other, assume dipthong FIRST.
* Duplicated vowels are a shift in pitch/register?
* Add the list of forms from the generator, later, lazyass
==Morphology==
==Morphology==
===Nouns===
===Nouns===

Revision as of 07:24, 18 June 2015

Under construction icon-orange
Language Under Construction
This language is under construction, and may not be ready for use. If you use this language in any other pages, expect that your translations may need to change, later. Do not use this language in page titles, yet.


Waterspeak
{{{nativename}}}
Language Family Water
Dialects
  • (Freshwater)
  • (Saltwater)
Written Forms (Knotted String)
Location
This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols.
Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters.


Introduction

Phonology

Consonants

  • z (Eng: 'ruse')
  • ʒ (Eng: 'rouge')
  • n (Eng: 'run')
  • ŋ (Eng: 'rung')

Vowels

  • iː (Eng: 'key')
  • eɪ (Eng: 'cane')
  • aɪ (Eng: 'kite')
  • ɛ (Eng: 'ken')
  • æ (Eng: 'cat')
  • ɝː (Eng: 'cur')
  • ʌ (Eng: 'cult')
  • ɑː (Eng: 'cop')
  • aʊ (Eng: 'cow')
  • ɔɪ (Eng: 'coy')
  • ɔː (Eng: 'caw')
  • ʊ (Eng: 'could')
  • oʊ (Eng: 'cope')
  • uː (Eng: 'cool')

Stress

Phonotactics

  • BEWARE OF DIPTHONGS. If there's two vowels next to each other, assume dipthong FIRST.
  • Duplicated vowels are a shift in pitch/register?
  • Add the list of forms from the generator, later, lazyass

Morphology

Nouns

  • Numerative markers? Plural? One-two-many?
  • Case?

Pronouns

  • Pronouns are genderless
  • Pronouns exist for person, place, thing, abstract concept

Adjectives

Prepositions

  • I expect we have some?

Conjunctions

Numbers

Names

Derivational morphology

Syntax

  • Word order
  • Verb tenses

Semantic fields and pragmatics

Writing system

Examples

Lexicon

See: Water Language/Lexicon