Vesenian
Vesenian (native: vesenesko /veseˈnesko/) is a Slavic language.
Introduction
Vesenian is an attempt to create a "Spanish-sounding" Slavic language.
Phonology
Orthography
Consonants
Vowels
Prosody
Stress
Intonation
Phonotactics
Morphophonology
Phonological history
From Proto-Slavic (with original vowel length preserved) to Proto-Vesenian
Vowels
- *oRC > *oRъC
- *eRC > *eRьC
- *ъRC > *ъRъC
- *ьRC > *ьRьC
- Weakening of yers:
- Yers were considered weak (and were likely shortened to some extent but were not completely dropped) when final, and when followed by a syllable in the same word that did not contain a weak yer.
- Yers followed by a syllable containing a weak yer were considered strong.
- Weak yers could not carry an accent. Therefore, any accent they had was shifted to the previous vowel, resulting in the neoacute.
- All final-syllable accents were shifted to the previous syllable (or the syllable before that if the penultimate syllable contained a weak yer), forming more cases of the neoacute.
- Neoacute vowels (including yers) were lengthened.
Consonants
- *šč > *sc / adjacent to front vowels
- *č > *c / adjacent to front vowels
- *č > *ť / otherwise
- *ždž > *zdz / adjacent to front vowels
- *ždž > *žď / otherwise
- *ž > *z / adjacent to front vowels
- *š > *s / adjacent to front vowels
- *ś > *s / everywhere
Proto-Venesian prounciation notes
- Preserved *š = /ç/
- Preserved *ž = /ʝ/
- *ť = /c/
- *ď = /ɟ/
- *ь = /ɪ/
- *ъ = /ʊ/
From Proto-Vesenian to Early Old Vesenian
Vowels
- Reformulation of strong and weak yers (only applies to short yers):
- The earlier distinction between strong and weak yers was lost.
- Final yers were preserved except when part of a polysyllabic inflectional ending and in some other exceptional cases.
- Elsewhere, yers were dropped whenever phonotactically feasible (with the second of a sequence of two yers being dropped when possible), lengthening the preceding vowel. This process was highly susceptible to analogy.
- Yers were also added to break impermissible consonant clusters. The quality of the yer was in accordance with the vowel of the syllable that it split.
- A front yer was also added word-initially before clusters of a sibilant + consonant.
- *ь̄ > e
- *ъ̄ > o
- *e > ь / before palatal consonants (j, ž, š, ť, ď)
- *o > vъ / initially before palatal consonants (j, ž, š, ť, ď)
- *o > ъ / non-initially before palatal consonants (j, ž, š, ť, ď)
From Early Old Vesenian to Late Old Vesenian
Vowels
- ь, ъ > i / adjacent to j, ž, š
- ь, ъ > e / adjacent to ť, ď
- ь > e / otherwise
- ъ > o / otherwise
- ě > ē
- ę > ēN / before a consonant (N = homorganic nasal to following consonant)
- ę > ē / otherwise
- ǫ > ōN / before a consonant
- ǫ > ō / otherwise
Consonants
- šť > ť / initially
- šť > jť / otherwise
- žď > ď / initially
- žď > jď / otherwise
- ť > č /c/ (purely transcription change)
- ď > ž /ʝ/
- j > ∅ / #_i
Transcription Notes
- Long vowels are consistently marked with macrons.
From Late Old Vesenian to Modern Vesenian
Vowels (vowel length marked)
- Non-final posttonic short vowels were often dropped where phonotactically feasible.
- Posttonic long vowels were shortened.
- ē > ië (note: ë = /ə/)
- ō > uë
- ā > a
- ī > i
- ū > u
- ȳ > ë
- ë > e
- CjV, CijV > CiV (i.e. became an opening diphthong)
- uej > ui /u̯i/
- This occurred after gC > jC and resulted in Old Vesenian ōgC becoming uiC.
- Cuie > Cui
- This (and the change below) occurred after CvV > CuV
- Cui > Cuj / before non-front vowels
Consonants
- š /ç/ > x
- c > ť /θ/
- j > j /ʝ/ / except when before a consonant (i.e. in a closing diphthong) or after /i/, in which case it is pronounced /j/
- ž > j /ʝ/
- dz > ď /ð/
- dl > gl
- tl > kl
- g > j / before consonants
- x > f / before consonants
- fv > f
- v > u /w/ / adjacent to consonants and word-finally
- r > r /ɾ/
- ř > ř /r/
- m > n / word-finally