User:IlL/Sketchbook: Difference between revisions

IlL (talk | contribs)
IlL (talk | contribs)
Line 9: Line 9:
==Brusingese==
==Brusingese==
<poem>
<poem>
I could have <öo> from au
or maybe oö from eu
as in Boötes grin emoticon
or ei > äa /æɑ/ as in haugen 'ice' > häagen
i mean au > äa
ei > oi
yes
and ih, üh, uh sounds are a bit lower
as in lushootseed
I had au > äa just so I could use äa grin emoticon
to compensate for that, short /ɪ/ can be /i/
sort of like a mock Australian accent
I could hopefully also have aä, oö, öo, uü, üu
heavy metal parody!
I'll have ää, öö, üü too of course!
ää, öö from aforementioned e: ø:
yes
åå from o:
or it could be <ꙮꙮ>
ei > aä?
could be
so it's general lowering of long vowels
ei > aä is a little Whetmerish-esque
yes
(but it's ok)
dialects overlap all the time
Philly~RP grin emoticon
also Fóõ for winter is "srel" (same as in Rencadian)!
So I have the following heavy metal umlauts:
aä (from ei)
äa (from au)
öö (from öh)
oö (from eu)
ää (from eh)
üü (from üh)
This could be Brusing!
but Brusing is a Wieb lect
I might not have the gleb gib
this shouldn't be considered Wieb (though it's more Wieb than the others grin emoticon )
I'll call it Brusingese
yes
I could eliminate length like GA
then I could get more heavy metal umlauts
öo <- ?
but I need only öo, üu and uü
here's a crazy thought: final l can be /ɭ/
though that doesn't affect the spelling
uü < short u?
sounds weird
short e > eo > öo?
or u < short u and uü < long u
maybe there's no need to have all of them
perhaps
these cover a pretty large base:
aä (from ei)
aä (from ei)
äa (from au)
äa (from au)
Line 84: Line 15:
oö (from eu)
oö (from eu)
üü (from üh)
üü (from üh)
yes!
it also sounds a little Old Englishy
äa = ea ...
crazy idea: oh > öo?
don't we have oh -> åå?
i think that'll make it even weirder (having åå)
What should happen to vocalized -r?
write them as a?
öhr -> öo
öhr -> öo
ühr -> üu
ühr -> üu
more heavy metal umlauts!
ehr > eä?
yes
that looks really Finnish grin emoticon
nimeä 'names', kiveä 'stones', ...
ahr > aa
ahr > aa
yes
it already sounds like aa
ier > iä, uhr > uå
ier > iä, uhr > uå
nice
final -Cer becomes -Ca
final -Cer becomes -Ca
 
short i > /i/, short u > /u/
-iä = partitive plural grin emoticon
and Hauer > *Häaa > Häa
 
you could spell it Häaa just for fun
though it's pronounced Häa
häaa häaa häaa häaa
grin emoticon
 
Häaa Rääba Jamms
looks really funny
short e > /e/, short o > /o/
short e > /e/, short o > /o/
</poem>
</poem>