Language 1:
- Second round umlaut — vowels directly preceding [i j ɥ[/i] are raised and/or fronted, with fronting continuing as many as the same vowel are adjacent;
[*][ə a] merge to [ɐ];
[*][ɐw] merges with [oː]; [ɛw] > [øː] after [ɥ];
[*]Loss of terminal [m n] with compensatory lengthening of preceding vowel; resulting [ɐː ʊː] > [aː uː];
[*]Laxing of remaining short vowels [i ø o u] > [ɪ œ ɒ ʊ];
[*]Loss of terminal unstressed short vowels following long vowels;
[*]Loss of unstressed pretonic short vowels in words of three syllables or more;
[*]A few spelling changes occur.]
/ˈkwoː ɪˈʃjaː ɐ xœsˈɫɥiː ˈwɒs ‖ ɐ sɐ ˈsoː ɡʊˈzoːŋ | aː ˈdoː.ɫɐ woːˈzoːɾ ‖ ɐˈɫoː | muː ɾyːˈtɾɥɛt | ɛɾ ˈɫɥøː twɒ xœsˈɫɥiː ɐ/
Cuo išia a heusliuí uos. A sa só Guzóng. Á daula Uózór. Alau, mú riútriuet, er liéu tuo heusliuí a.
Language 2:
- Long vowel breaking in stressed closed syllables: [œː iː ɔː øː] > [jo ai wo ɥe];
- Long vowels become falling diphthongs in open syllables [ɛː ɑː œː] > [ɛj ɑw øj];
- [s ʂ] > [ʃ] before voiceless stops and front vowels;
- Unstressed pretonic and posttonic short vowels reduce to schwa except if the coda is [j] or [w]
- Stressed short [ʊ ɔ] > [wo we]
- Debuccalisation of [f] > [h]
- Spelling changes.
/ˈpjow əˈʃɛj ɐ hoʃ.kəˈtain ˈvoʃt ‖ ɐ ʃəˈswen.nɐ bəˈʐaij.jə | em ˈdɑw.zən vowˈdøj.zə ‖ əˈzɑw | mwon lo.kənˈʈ͡ʂwot | ɛʐ ˈjɥem tɑj ho.ʃkəˈtain ɐ/
Piol ešei a hošketain vošt. A šeswenna Bežaiyye, em dauzen Voldöize. Azau, muon, lokenčuot, ež iuem tai hošketain e.
Huh, two related languages. That's nice.