Judeo-Gaelic

From Linguifex
Revision as of 23:22, 14 March 2017 by IlL (talk | contribs) (Rimes)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Judeo-Chinese is a descendant of Middle Chinese adopted by Chinese Jews in Verse:Tumhan, written in a version of the Hebrew alphabet. Like other Chinese varieties, it is a tonal language and is unintelligible to speakers of other Chinese lects.

Phonology

Initials

Consonant phonemes
Labial Dental Retroflex Velar Laryngeal
broad slender broad slender slender broad
Nasal n̪ˠ ŋʲ ŋ
Stop plain t̪ˠ k ʔ
aspirated pˠʰ pʲʰ t̪ˠʰ tʲʰ kʲʰ
voiced d̪ˠ ɟ g
Affricate plain t̪sˠ tsʲ
aspirated t̪sˠʰ tsʲʰ tʂʰ
voiced d̪zˠ dzʲ
Fricative voiceless ʂ x h
voiced ɣʲ ɣ
Approximant l̪ˠ ɻ j

Rimes

(baxter) a, wa, ja, jwa > a, å, ja, jå? "i" was ngaX

yes actually a, å, ia, iå (i = palatalization) ae, wae, jae > ä, œ/ø, iä (ä = /ε/) u, jo, ju > u, iø, iu (all this assumes the syllable is initial and thus stressed, perhaps there's reduction in unstressed syllables)

what's ø? as in myuftseezh? (that's what the <iø> combination makes me think of 😀 ) some kind of front rounded vowel maybe /œ/ -j final codas: óigh bhféigh, there's a shitton of them

D

oj, ajH > aj woj, wajH > åj

so is there a vowel split based on tone? ajH and aejH only occur with H eaj, aejH > äj

ä = finnish ä? could be weaj, waejH > öj jejH, jiejH, jwejH, jwiejH might have the same outcome as je, jie, jwe, jwie those finals with -ji- are called chongniu finals i could merge jiej completely with jej like mandarin does or they could be different i'll treat jiej like jij and jwiej like jwij je(j), jwe(j) > ie, iüö? or maybe /'ie, 'üö/ ej, wej > /ie, yø/ or maybe ie and üö should be /e, ø/ joj, jwoj > /ej, øj/

here's something CRAZY a literally-read irish sinolang with /aoi/ as a rime ij, jij, wij, jwij > /i, 'i, y, 'y/ i > /i/ j+j, jw+j > /'i, 'y/ maube all those y's shd really be uj's -jew > -y'hudi 😀 aw, aew, jew, jiew, ew, uw, juw, jiw > /aw, äw, 'aw, 'ew, äw, u, 'u, ew/

D

i like -y'hudi actually sorry aw, aw, iaw, iew, ew, u, iu, iew om, am, eam, aem, jem, jiem, jaem, jom, em, im, jim > um, om, am, am, iem, im, iam, iom, ium, em, im, jim

looks good (similarly for -p rimes)

-ium 😀 an, wan, aen, waen, ean, wean > an, ån, än, ön, en, øn

ann, uann, ainn, uainn, eann, uainn in a literal irish version jen, jwen, jon, jwon > ien, iøn, ion, iun en, wen, on, won > en, øn, on, un in, jin, win, jwin, j+n, jun > in, yn, un, iun, in, iun y = hard /i/

ngá = I in literal irishy sinitic

D

ak, wak, jak, jwak > ak, åk, iak, iåk aewk > ?

aoigh auk?

that works ok, wok, ik, wik > ok, uk, ik, uk aek, waek, eak, waek > äk, ök, äk, ök jaek, jwaek > iäk, iök jek jwek ek wek > iek iøk ek øk uwk owk juwk jowk > uk ok iuk iok i might do something with œ and ø make them central vowels maybe merge them to ə or œ > a, ø > ə

œ > a is interesting i have a æ e i o u ə in the end - like Rõktiap 😀 actually å will also merge to o

Tonality

Orthography

Grammar