Niw Englisch/Grammar/Alphabet and Pronunciation
Appearance
< Niw Englisch | Grammar
(Redirected from Niw Englisc/Grammar/Alphabet and Pronunciation)The Niw Englisc alphabet consists of 32 letters:
- Capital: A, Æ, B, C, D, Ð, E, F, G, Ȝ, H, Ƕ, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, Œ, P, Q, R, S, T, Þ, U, V, W, X, Y, Z
- Lowercase: a, æ, b, c, d, ð, e, f, g, ȝ, h, ƕ, i, j, k, l, m, n, o, œ, p, q, r, s, t, þ, u, v, w, x, y, z
- Pronunciation: ah, aesh, beh, cheh, deh, eth, eh, eff, geh, yogh, hah, hwair, ee, yot, kah, ell, em, en, oh, oethel, peh, kuu, er, ess, teh, thorn, oo, veh, twifald veh, iks, yppsilon, tsett
Note: if you do not have æ or œ on your keyboard, you can use ae/oe or ä/ö insted; th for þ, dh for ð; hw for ƕ; j for ȝ
Vowels
[edit | edit source]Vowel | short | long |
---|---|---|
Aa | [a] as in German Wasser, ab | [aː] as in English father |
Ææ | [æ],[ɛ] as in English hat, German Männer | [ɛː],[eː] as in English air, German gäbe |
Ee | [ɛ] as in English west, German Bett | [eː] as in German reh, See |
Ii | [ɪ] as in English bit | [iː] as in German ihn |
Oo | [ɔ] as in German Gott | [oː] as in German Bote |
Œœ | [œ] as in German Götter | [øː] as in German schön |
Uu | [ʊ] as in German Mutter | [uː] as in German gut, food |
Ẏẏ | [ʏ] as in German Müller | [yː] as in German grün |
Consonants
[edit | edit source]Consonant | initial | middle, final |
---|---|---|
B | [b] | [b], [p] next to voiceless consonants |
C | [tʃ] | [tʃ] |
D | [d] | [d], [t] if not doubled in some dialects at ends of syllables |
Ð | - this letter never occurs initially | [ð] only between vowels, alternates with þ |
F | [f] | [v] between vowels, [f] final position |
G | [g] | [g], [x] when alternating with ȝ after back vowels [ç]/[x] when alternating with ȝ after front vowels |
Ȝ | [j] | [j] between vowels, or finally alternates with [g] with inflections added |
H | [h] | [j] between vowels, or finally |
Ƕ | [hw] | never final |
J | [j] | [j] between vowels, or finally |
L | [l] in all positions | |
M | [m] in all positions | |
N | [n] in all positions | |
P | [p] in all positions | |
Q | [kw], only in foreign words native words use kw |
|
R | r, trilled as in Scottish English | [r], regular American English r, always pronounced |
S | [s] | [z] between vowels, [s] finally |
T | [s] | [z] between vowels, [s] finally |
Þ | [θ] initially | [θ] finally alternates with ð between vowels to indicate voiced sound |
V | [v] | [v] |
W | [w] | [w] |
X | [z] only in foreign words | [ks] |
Z | [ts] | [ts], between vowels or in stressed syllables, [dz] |
Diphthongs
[edit | edit source]Diphthong | pronunciation |
---|---|
ai, aȝ | [aɪ] as in English mine |
æȝ | [eɪ] as in English main |
au | [aʊ] as in English house |
ea | [ɛː] as in English main, German gäbe some speakers add a slight schwa sound too |
ei, eȝ | [ɛ] as in English fine, German mein |
eo | [eo] as in Old English deorc, [eːo] as in Old English fréo |
ie, iȝ | [iː] as in English mean |
io | [i̯o] as in German Aktion, not English action |
Runes
[edit | edit source]Niw Englisc can be written in Runes, an older Germanic alphabet. In this system the words can be written left-to-right, right-to-left (where the runs face towards the left), and boustrephedonically (alternating left-to-right, then right-to-left on the second line, then back to left-to-right).
Rune | Letter |
---|---|
ᚪ | A |
ᚫ | Æ |
ᛒ | B |
ᚳ | C |
ᛞ | D |
ᚧ | Ð |
ᛖ | E |
ᚠ | F |
ᚸ | G |
ᚷ | Ȝ |
ᚻ | H |
ᚼ | Ƕ |
ᛁ | I |
ᛄ | J |
ᛣ | K |
ᛚ | L |
ᛗ | M |
ᚾ | N |
ᚩ | O |
ᛟ | Œ |
ᛈ | P |
ᛢ | Q |
ᚱ | R |
ᛋ | S |
ᛏ | T |
ᚢ | U |
ᚡ | V |
ᚹ | W |
ᛉ | X |
ᚣ | Y |
ᛊ | Z |
ᛝ | NG |
ᛠ | EA |
ᛇ | EO |
ᛡ | IA/IO |
ᛣ | KK, CK (in foreign words) |
ᛥ | ST (only within a syllable, not when combining words) |
Rune | Punctuation Mark |
---|---|
᛬ | (space) |
᛫ | period |
᛭ | end of text/paragraph |
ᛑ | question mark |
ᚽ | exclamation mark |
ᚮ ᚭ | parentheses |
ᛧ | comma |
ᛌ | single quotation mark, apostrophe |
ᛃ | double quotation mark |
Example:
- ᛣᚩᛗᛗ᛬ᚻᛁᛖᚱᚽ komm hier! Come here!
- ᛋᚳᛁᛖ᛬ᛋᚫᚷᛞᛖᛧᛃᚻᚪᛚᛚᚩ᛫ᛃ Scie sæȝde, "Hallo." She said, "hello."