Not a single fricative, apart form the obvious English loan at the beginning .... lots of sonorants including palatalized and nasal ones. /p/ at syllable edge, /b/ between vowels. For some odd reason there's a lot of /q/ and no /k/. Oh and the /ŋ/. Im guessing this is Australian but just in an unusual orthography. The umlaut seems to mostly occur next to palatals so Im guessing the true vowel inventory is just /a i u/.Karch wrote: ↑Wed Jul 29, 2020 6:36 pmYes, qaayaar̃, Muuniŋʸäp qaall qwaap nʸiänaŋ - Piilʸär̃inʸ, niundulitʸ waarŋ puärt.
Ŋaütʸ quütʸ waarŋinʸ, ŋaütʸ quütʸ qaattitʸinʸ taa-waarŋanʸ Puaġinarap, Taalʸäraq-muur̃uq Piilʸar̃ap.
Qaall qwaap niätʸ nʸiänaŋ Piilʸär̃äp, puaġitʸ Tʸiurddiŋʸ-yäir̃, Maun-yuaŋap, qaatt-paurn niätʸ.
Qaallaqitʸ qwaap, tuaanq pualitʸ, ŋaannʸ wuarar niätʸ yuaġaŋ nʸiänaŋ.
Ŋaalaqq nʸiänitʸinʸ tuaangaqq qaattitʸinʸ, yuagaŋ nʸianiŋʸ muur̃urt-puutt maarnaŋ.
Ŋaannʸ waarderitʸ muur̃urt quumpaarl. Paulabinitʸ muur̃urt quumpaarl, pauläbinʸ Qäip-e-qäill. Ŋaannʸ wuarar nʸiänaŋ Piilʸär̃äp. Ŋaannʸ quurt-waara nʸiänaŋ.
Despite all of this I cant make a more pointed guess than just saying it's Australian .... I thought maybe I might be able to pin it down just by looking for languages with a voiced retroflex flap, but I couldnt find any.