I've been working on Goblin, a funky North Germanic language. Despite this language being reserved for a story most certainly on Earth, I wanted to ground it in a North Germanic look & feel, and why bother rebuilding the wheel?
Today I reworked the phonology with Ness's input, and that kind of broke the system I was working with. For instance, new consonantal phonological inventory is:
- Nasal: m n nʲ ɲ (ŋʷ)
- Plosives: g͡bʲ t d dʲ k g gʲ kʷ ʔ
- Fricatives: z ɕ ʑ ɣ ɦ ɦʲ
- Lateral: l ʎ̝
- Approximant: ʋ ɥ j
But then I looked at the old broken vowel system [i æ æ̃ ə ɑ u], plus the syllabics [m̩ n̩ʲ l̩ n̩] (n̩ʲ is ʑ˞ in some dialects. No r, but a rhotic vowel -- why? Goblins, baby.) I decided to break it even further.
The Problem
Well, I loved the chiastic five-vowel system (four corners one center), but I decided, what if... who cares about front-back, high-low? What if the vowel system was defined primarily by a number of features, specifically rounded-unrounded / voiced ~ creaky / short ~ long / high ~ low pitch. Working on that assumption, I need something the IPA doesn't have so you'll yell at me, but I used [c o ɔ], as in, unrounded ~ semi-unrounded ~ rounded, giving a vowel system of:
- [ĉ̬ ĉ̬ː c̬ c̬ː č̬ č̬ː ĉ̰ ĉ̰ː c̰ c̰ː č̰ č̰ː]
- [ô̬ ô̬ː o̬ o̬ː ǒ̬ ǒ̬ː ô̰ ô̰ː o̰ o̰ː ǒ̰ ǒ̰ː]
- [ɔ̬̌ ɔ̬̌ː ɔ̬ ɔ̬ː ɔ̬̂ ɔ̬̂ː ɔ̰̂ ɔ̰̂ː ɔ̰ ɔ̰ː ɔ̰̌ ɔ̰̌ː]
And orthographically, whoo boy. That's going to take a minute for me to figure out.
If any of you have a good suggestion on this approach, please. By all means. I'm listening.