Elyŝiskää Dialects
Elyŝiskää is a complex dialect continuum, with most varieties lying on one of five groups of dialects, together with two isolated dialects. This grouping is based on relatively significant concentrations in isoglosses
There are 10 main isoglosses:
The umlauted vowels:
The pronunciation of the vowels ä, ö, y varies
æ ø y: the umlauted vowels are always /æ/ /ø/ /y/
e e iu: ä and ö are /e/, y is /i/ except in a few anharmonic words where it harmonises to /u/
(e e iu): in unstressed syllables behaves as e e iu, otherwise they take their standard values
((e e iu)): in unstressed syllables, short umlauted vowels behave as e e iu, otherwise vowels take their standard values
(((e e iu))): in syllables without primary stress behaves as e e iu, otherwise vowels take their standard values
Consonantal j:
The glides are phonemically divided between vocalic (where it appears after a consonant in the same syllable) and consonantal (all other occurrences)
j: there is no difference in pronunciation between consonantal and vocalic j
š: consonantal j is pronounced /ʃ/
h: consonantal j merges into h
g: consonantal j is pronounced /g/
Ø; consonantal j is dropped completely
Consonantal w:
The glides are phonemically divided between vocalic j (where it appears after a consonant in the same syllable) and consonantal j (all other occurrences)
w: there is no difference between consonantal and vocalic w
f: consonantal w is pronounced /f/
h: consonantal w merges into h
b: consonantal w is pronounced /b/
g: consonantal w is pronounced /g/
Ø: consonantal w is dropped completely
Voicing:
Differing varieties condition voicing in different environments, this is usually only directly represented in the fricatives and the affricate č
1: voicing occurs between vowels (or between a vowel and a vocalic glide), or adjacent to a nasal or voiced stop
V: voicing occurs between vowels (or between a vowel and a vocalic glide)
N: voicing occurs between vowels (or between a vowel and a vocalic glide), or adjacent to a nasal
D: voicing occurs between vowels (or between a vowel and a vocalic glide), or adjacent to a voiced stop
Velar Nasal ň:
The velar nasal ň has many variant pronunciations
ŋ: ň is always pronounced /ŋ/
m: in clusters with a labial, ň merges into m
n: ň merges into n in all positions
(n): in clusters with a dental, alveolar, or postalveolar, ň merges into n, otherwise it is pronounced /ŋ/
nm: in clusters with a labial, ň merges into m, in clusters with a dental, alveolar, or postalveolar it merges into n, otherwise it is pronounced ŋ
j: ň is always pronounced /j/
(j): ň is pronounced /j/ in voiced positions, and /ŋ/ in all other positions
The Postalveolars š and č:
The postalveolars š and č have several different pronunciations
ʃ tʃ: the postalveolars are pronounced /ʃ/ & /tʃ/ when voiceless and /ʒ/ & /dʒ/ when voiced
s ts: the postalveolars are pronounced /s/ & /ts/ when voiceless and /z/ & /dz/ when voiced
z g: the postalveolars are pronounced /z/ and /g/ in all positions
h th: the postalveolars merge into h and ŝ
j j: the postalveolars merge into j in all positions
(j j): the postalveolars merge into j when voiced and /ʃ/ & /tʃ/ when voiceless
The clusters sj and tj:
In different dialects the clusters sj and tj are pronounced differently
sj tj: sj, tj, & dj are pronounced as the clusters /sj/, /tj/, & /dj/
š č: sj & tj merge into š & č, dj is pronounced /dʒ/
ž dž: sj, tj, & dj are pronounced as /ʒ/, /dʒ/, & /dʒ/
j š: sj merges into j; tj & dj are pronounced /ʃ/ & /ʒ/
j j: sj, tj, & dj merge into j
Voiced h:
The pronunciation of h in voiced positions varies between dialects
h: h is pronounced as h in voiced positions
ɣ: h is pronounced as /ɣ/ in voiced positions
Ø: h is dropped in voiced positions
Voiceless h:
The pronunciation of h in voiceless positions varies between dialects
h: h is pronounced h in voiceless positions in voiceless positions
k: in clusters voiceless h merges into k, otherwise it is /h/
2: in clusters voiceless h leads to gemination of the other consonant, otherwise it is /h/
(2): in clusters voiceless h leads to gemination of a preceding consonant, in all other positions it is /h/
L: voiceless h is lost with lengthening of any preceding vowel, even with intervening consonants
(L): voiceless h is lost with compensatory lengthening if immediately following a vowel, otherwise it is /h/
L2: in clusters, voiceless h is lost with compensatory lengthening of the preceding segment, leaving gemination of a preceding consonant, or lengthening of a preceding vowel; otherwise it is /h/
The dental ŝ:
The dental fricative has varying pronunciations in different dialects
θ: ŝ is pronounced /θ/ when voiceless and /ð/ in voiced positions
s: ŝ merges into s
f: ŝ merges into f
t: ŝ merges into t
h: ŝ merges into h
r: ŝ merges into r
(r): ŝ merges into r in voiced positions, is /θ/ otherwise
l: ŝ merges into l
(l): ŝ merges into l in voiced positions, is /θ/ otherwise







