Verse:Mwail/Bri: Difference between revisions
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!rowspan=2|Glottalized initial (0) | !rowspan=2|Glottalized initial (0) | ||
!| deutero- | !| deutero-aëchal (-) | ||
| ''dridh<sup>A0-</sup>'' | | ''dridh<sup>A0-</sup>'' | ||
| ''bae<sup>B0-</sup>'' | | ''bae<sup>B0-</sup>'' | ||
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|- | |- | ||
!rowspan=2|Modal initial (1) | !rowspan=2|Modal initial (1) | ||
!| deutero- | !| deutero-aëchal (-) | ||
| ''eodh<sup>A1-</sup>'' | | ''eodh<sup>A1-</sup>'' | ||
| ''aoidh<sup>B1-</sup>'' | | ''aoidh<sup>B1-</sup>'' | ||
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|- | |- | ||
!rowspan=2|Breathy initial (2) | !rowspan=2|Breathy initial (2) | ||
!| deutero- | !| deutero-aëchal (-) | ||
| ''gw<sup>A2-</sup>'' | | ''gw<sup>A2-</sup>'' | ||
| ''bragh<sup>B2-</sup>'' | | ''bragh<sup>B2-</sup>'' | ||
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''Deuteroechal'' includes prenasalized stops and regular (voiced non-glottalized) resonants during the second initial-phonation-based tone split. | ''Deuteroechal'' includes prenasalized stops and regular (voiced non-glottalized) resonants during the second initial-phonation-based tone split. Other initials, such as non-prenasalized stops, are termed ''deutero-aëchal.'' (The Greek words I got these makeshift words from are ''deutero-'' 'second' and ''ēkhēros/aēkhos'' 'voiced/voiceless'.) | ||
== Grammar == | == Grammar == | ||
Revision as of 02:22, 29 June 2025
Bri was the classical language of Mwail British Isles, belonging to the Keric family. In the year 4000, Bri served as a religious, ceremonial, and poetic language; it was a monosyllabic tonal language, with 24 tones realized via 24 different cantillation melodies.
The native Bri script is a right-to-left logography (lines of text go from up to down).
Phonology of 5th Millenium Bri
Initials
(The first member of each pair indicates a broad initial, the second a slender one)
- Null: 0 /ʔ j/
- Stops: b /pˠ pʲ/ d /t̪ˠ tʲ/ g /k kʲ/
- Trills: br /ʙˠ ʙʲ/ dr /rˠ r̝ʲ/ gr /ʀ ʀʲ/
- Nasals: m /mˠ mʲ/ n /n̪ˠ nʲ/ ng /ŋ ŋʲ/
- Nasal trills: mbr /ⁿʙˠ ⁿʙʲ/ ndr /ⁿrˠ ⁿr̝ʲ/ ngr /ⁿʀ ⁿʀʲ/
- Approximants: zh /ɻ ʐ/
Rimes
Nuclei: /a e i o u ə/ a/ea ae/e aoi/i o/eo u/iu w/iw (The first member of each pair indicates a broad initial, the second a slender one)
Finals: 0 bh dh gh /0 w ðˠ j/
Tones
The following lists the native names of the 24 tones:
| A (null or resonant coda) | B (glottal stop coda) | C (fricative coda) | D (voiceless stop coda) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glottalized initial (0) | deutero-aëchal (-) | dridhA0- | baeB0- | zheaC0- | goghD0- |
| deuteroechal (+) | mbraoiA0+ | driwdhB0+ | ndreoC0+ | dwghD0+ | |
| Modal initial (1) | deutero-aëchal (-) | eodhA1- | aoidhB1- | zhiuC1- | grughD1- |
| deuteroechal (+) | meaA1+ | zhobhB1+ | nebhC1+ | ngaedhD1+ | |
| Breathy initial (2) | deutero-aëchal (-) | gwA2- | braghB2- | dreC2- | dabhD2- |
| deuteroechal (+) | ngeadhA2+ | beghB2+ | gaoibhC2+ | ndreghD2+ | |
Deuteroechal includes prenasalized stops and regular (voiced non-glottalized) resonants during the second initial-phonation-based tone split. Other initials, such as non-prenasalized stops, are termed deutero-aëchal. (The Greek words I got these makeshift words from are deutero- 'second' and ēkhēros/aēkhos 'voiced/voiceless'.)