Romanizing bidental fricatives
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Romanizing bidental fricatives
How would you guys romanize fortis and lenis (voiceless and voiced or something similar) bidental fricatives? I’m interested in both of the following, if they differ:
1) Your preferred romanization with no restrictions
2) A romanization that does not use diacritics, for a language that also has alveolar, palato-alveolar, and (post)velar fricatives
1) Your preferred romanization with no restrictions
2) A romanization that does not use diacritics, for a language that also has alveolar, palato-alveolar, and (post)velar fricatives
Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
Romanization of bidental fricatives is always tricky for me — there aren’t any options I really like. If I had to choose I would use:Chengjiang wrote: ↑Wed Sep 02, 2020 8:36 pm How would you guys romanize fortis and lenis (voiceless and voiced or something similar) bidental fricatives? I’m interested in both of the following, if they differ:
1) Your preferred romanization with no restrictions
2) A romanization that does not use diacritics, for a language that also has alveolar, palato-alveolar, and (post)velar fricatives
/f v θ ð s z ʃ ʒ χ ʀ/
1) ⟨f v θ~þ~ŧ~ṯ~c ð~ḏ~đ s z š ž x~h ɣ~ƣ~g~ġ~ğ⟩
2) ⟨f v θ~þ~th~c ð~dh s z š ž x~h ɣ~ƣ~g⟩
The choice between those options mostly depends on the rest of the phonology (e.g. if I had /ts/ I might not be able to use ⟨c⟩ for /θ/).
Also, do you have a specific phonology you want to romanize? If so you might want to post it to the Romanization Challenge Thread.
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
bradrn, I’m not talking about interdental “th” fricatives, I’m talking about this type of consonant: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiceles ... _fricative
Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
Oh, interesting — I had not heard of that sound before. In that case, the grapheme that comes to mind is ⟨ꜧ⟩, which is what I think I would use. Other possible letters include ⟨ħ ẖ ḫ ꞙ ƒ ẍ⟩ etc. Really, I think you could use pretty much anything for such an obscure phoneme, as long as it sort of makes sense.Chengjiang wrote: ↑Thu Sep 03, 2020 1:46 am bradrn, I’m not talking about interdental “th” fricatives, I’m talking about this type of consonant: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiceles ... _fricative
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
For Queranarran, which actually has this sound, I romanise it {hsh}.
It's also got a bidental clack, which I romanise {dq}.
It's also got a bidental clack, which I romanise {dq}.
--insert pithy saying here--
Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
Why the image? They’re perfectly representable in plain text: ⟨🜦 ∮⟩. (Well, close enough.)
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
Those... are completely different things. Besides, my plan was to combine theta and phi for the uppercase, eff and thorn for the lower case.
I did it. I made the world's worst book review blog.
Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
But only if you look at the codepoint — otherwise they look nearly identical!
(Also: I was aware of that, that was sort of the point.)
In that case, I’d prefer ⟨ⴲ ꝥ⟩. (And both of those are even real letters!)Besides, my plan was to combine theta and phi for the uppercase, eff and thorn for the lower case.
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
OK, I mean this with love, but when was the last time you had your eyes checked?
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
Um… well… perhaps I should go check them again? But alright, ‘nearly identical’ was perhaps just a little bit of an exaggeration (brought on by enthusiasm for the subject of obscure Unicode characters); maybe ‘vaguely similar’ would have been better…?Moose-tache wrote: ↑Thu Sep 03, 2020 9:00 am OK, I mean this with love, but when was the last time you had your eyes checked?
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
You'll always win me over with obscure unicode characters. Maybe there should be a Romanization scheme that uses alchemical symbols exclusively?
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
Please, please don’t distract me like this when I have important work to do…Moose-tache wrote: ↑Thu Sep 03, 2020 10:34 am Maybe there should be a Romanization scheme that uses alchemical symbols exclusively?
…but, as it happens, you can make a romanization (alchemicization?) out of alchemical symbols! Not only that, but it’s not even too bad, if I say so myself. Observe:
/p t k/ ⟨🜕 🝨 🝌⟩
/ᵐb d/ ⟨🝫 🜂⟩
/f h̪͆ θ s ð ɣ/ ⟨🝡 🜦 🜔 🝉 🝝 🜻⟩
/w ʋ ʒ/ ⟨🝃 🝣 🜓⟩
/i ʊ e ʌ o æ ɑ/ ⟨🝢 🜰 🝗 🝠 🜘 🜶 🝛⟩
An example:
/æwkʌᵐbi is fʌᵐb/ ⟨🜶🝃🝌🝠🝫🝢 🝢🝉 🝡🝠🝫⟩
(Remind me again how we got here from bidental fricatives? )
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
Regarding the rest of the inventory: It both keeps changing because I’m indecisive and has a fairly obvious (to me) representation of any other sounds i’ve considered including. Also, enough of it is made of sounds that are marginal to human language (non-hominin primate speakers) that it’s a pain to type out here. (I mostly post from my phone these days, so even regular IPA can get obnoxious.)
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
How about <ḥ ṛ> (assuming you want a voicing distinction)
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
(I admit an ulterior motive for this thread: I’m fascinated by the different things bidental fricatives apparently sound like to different people, judging from how I’ve seen people transcribe them in the past.)
Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
If the language had /f v θ ð/, uses already for all plausible pairs of <s z x j h r w v c y>, AND these babies I would go for <f v ɸ β þ ð>. To me they sound like something halfway between dental and bilabial fricatives, and the Greek letters in context somehow capture this for me.
<f v fh vh th dh> could also work if we were doing digraphs.
I do feel sorry for speakers of such a language who have lost their teeth, though!
<f v fh vh th dh> could also work if we were doing digraphs.
I do feel sorry for speakers of such a language who have lost their teeth, though!
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
I think that per analogy it makes sense to use variants of <h>, <v> or <f>, because (a) bidental and glottal /h/ fricatives do not involve any classic active articulators and (b) labiodental /f, v/ and bidental uses the same passive articulator, namely the teeth. Also, all of them are fricatives of course.
I have to admit that I also like the idea of using <ⴲ> as a kind of doubled theta (BIdental, you get it). Maybe a doubled delta would work for the voiced version?
I have to admit that I also like the idea of using <ⴲ> as a kind of doubled theta (BIdental, you get it). Maybe a doubled delta would work for the voiced version?
Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
Thank you! (Though, as Moose-tache indicated, it was meant as a combination of theta+phi.) I must admit that it was originally intended as a joke, but since posting it I’ve actually come to like it quite a bit.Creyeditor wrote: ↑Fri Sep 04, 2020 7:01 am I have to admit that I also like the idea of using <ⴲ> as a kind of doubled theta (BIdental, you get it).
Unicode has everything! In this case, Closed Little Yus would do: ⟨Ꙙ ꙙ⟩Maybe a doubled delta would work for the voiced version?
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Re: Romanizing bidental fricatives
I think <ⴲ> and <Ꙙ> do actually look cool. I also think both of them would fit in a romanization without being classic roman letters.