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High Karanesa

Pronunciation[tʃàsˈtɛ̂kʰǎɾān]
Created by
Setting and usageSpectradom
Native speakers
Several million
Purpose
Official status
Official language in
Republic of Karan
Language codes
ISO 639-3RKD
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High Karanesa (IPA: [tʃàsˈtɛ̂kʰǎɾān])is a Nentan language spoken in eastern Quillan. It is the language of the Republic of Karan.

Phonology[edit | edit source]

Main article: Rokadong phonology

Consonants[edit | edit source]

Consonant phonemes
Labial alveolar Post-
alveolar
/
palatal
Velar
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Stop p b t d t͡ʃ d͡ʒ  k g
Sibilant s (z) ʃ ʒ
Fricative f θ (ð) x
Approximant j w
Lateral t͡ɬ d͡ɮ ʎ
Tap ɾ

Notes[edit | edit source]

  • Nasal and sibilant consonants lose their contrast before stop consonants. However, they still contrast in all other positions
  • Morpheme-final voiceless plosives all lose their contrast, becoming [ʔ]. However, if the following morpheme starts with a vowel, the original sound returns.
  • The voiced alveolar fricatives /z ð/ are marginally phonemic, with only loanwords having them consistently. The former is also usually affricated, to [d͡z].
  • The voiced alveolar lateral affricate /d͡ɮ/ is often backed, sounding like [].

Vowels[edit | edit source]

Vowel phonemes
Front Central Back
Close i ɨ u
Close-mid e o
Centering iə̯ aə̯~əː uə̯~ɯɵ̯
Open-mid e o
Open a

Notes[edit | edit source]

  • Centering vowels flatten before approximants and voiced laterals: /iə̯d͡ɮ aə̯ʎ uə̯j/ [ɪːdɮ əːʎ ʌːj].

Stress and accent[edit | edit source]

Like most Nentan languages, High Karanesa has pitch accent. The stressed syllable, or "root", forms the base of the pitch contour, while adjacent syllables are affected by it. Most other syllables have a mid or "neutral" tone. There are three different pitch patterns:

  • Plateau tone: the accented syllable is high, and the following syllable is high-falling. If the second syllable is stressed, most High Karanesa dialects also give the preceding syllable a mid-falling pitch.
  • Valley tone: the accented syllable is high-falling, and the following syllable is mid-rising.
  • Summit tone: the accented syllable is low-rising, and the following syllable is high-falling.

Some dialects appear to have a fourth tone, with no standard name but often called "open ocean tone" or "anti-plateau tone." The accented syllable is low, often lower even than summit tone, and the preceding syllable is mid-falling. This is associated with an onset backed /k/, which is why it is debated whether or not this is a phonemic tone. If it is one, then High Karanesa is tied for the most pitch accent patterns in the Nentan family.

Orthography[edit | edit source]

High Karanesa may be either written using the Latin alphabet or one of the two native scripts: the calligraphic castedan, or the blockletter razhidan.

Consonants[edit | edit source]

Consonant clusters that end in y drop the y before c or j, and change it to an i at the end of a word.

Consonant phonemes
Labial alveolar Post-
alveolar
/
palatal
Velar
Nasal m n ny ng
Stop p b t d c j k g
Sibilant s z sh zh
Fricative f th dh h
Approximant y w
Lateral l ll ly
Tap r

Vowels[edit | edit source]

Final i and u are not pronounced at the end of a morpheme. However, the former indicates that the following consonant is palatalized, and both vowels reappear when an affix is applied to the word (but not in compound words, where they are instead dropped entirely).

Vowel phonemes
Front Central Back
Close i á u
Close-mid é ó
Centering î  â  û 
Open-mid e o
Open a