Okay. Upon loss of stress, the formerly-stressed vowels shifted as follows (short marked under cover symbols cause tone system), noting the orthographic changes occurred later: [A → O, Á → Ó, E → Y, É → Ý, I → U, Í → Ú].Akangka wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2019 4:44 pm"the" is not unexpected. It just that /ð/ and /θ/ is represented with the same graph <th>. Also it's an allophonic shifts, until something is done to the rest so that the appearance of /ʔ/ and /ɴ/ is no longer predictable. (For example, if some vowel becomes /u/, but the shift stops to operate)yangfiretiger121 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 01, 2019 11:33 am Thanks, Akangka. I'll think about the final forms.
Before I post Aéhoi Creole's redone inventory, I have a question about phone classification. As commonly-used words can behave unexpectedly (the as [ðə], not [θə]), are <c> unconditionally shifting [p͡ʔ → ʔ] and <h> shifting [ɴ̥͡ɱ̊ → ɴ̥] before <u, ú> in its particles phonemic or allophonic shifts?
Are there any natural languages with vowel-inclusive roots? I am considering allowing Aéhoi Creole's roots to contain long high-tone vowels, such as [ə˦ː]. If I do so, Aéhoi's root would be <éh>.
Aéhoi Creole uses particles, similar to East Asian languages. The locative particle's always been oa [œ.ɶ]. Is having the movement particles (lative, ablative, place-to-place coupla) as tonal derivatives of the locative (oxa [œ˩˥.ɶ]; oax [œ.ɶ˩˥]; oxax [œ˩˥.ɶ˩˥] in that order) from the start or having the movements faux-merge into the locative by tonal derivation more natural since all four particles are still in use?