This page has been validated.
Alphabet
Vowels
a | e i | o u |
(a˘) | ι | u, ϋ |
ᵃ | ᵢ | ᵤ |
aₐ | eᵢ iᵢ | oᵤ |
Consonants
— | — | — | — | — | (dl) |
p | t | ts | k, kᵘ | q | — |
p! | t! | ts! | k!, k!ᵘ | q! | — |
— | s | — | (x̯)[1] | x̣ | ł |
m | n | — | — | — | — |
h, w, y, ʼ |
· | long sounds. |
: | very long sounds. |
˘ | short sounds. |
′ | principal stress accent. |
‵ | secondary stress accent. |
. | separate sounds, particularly in t.s and t.ł, indicating that these sounds are not affricatives. |
′ | high tone. |
ˆ | sinking tone. |
Description of Sounds | |
e, i | represent a sound which is by origin probably a somewhat open i. In contact with velars and palatals, it inclines toward the sound of e. When long, the sound is always slightly diphthongized. |
o, u | represent a u with very slight rounding of lips. In contact with velars, it inclines toward the sound of o. When long, the sound is always slightly diphthongized. |
(a˘), ι, υ | open vowels, often followed by long consonants. |
ϋ | open short, about as German ü in Hütte. The pronunciation of this vowel differs very much among individuals. Some pronounce a clear ι; others a u. All admit that both these extreme forms are correct. |
- ↑ Only in Coyote's pronunciation.
xi