okay. conlang time again. time to work out some basics of skalian.
as before, my guiding principles are that i want it to be simple, bc i am Not Ambitious, and also that i want it to sound sort of rough and harsh to match the warrior culture of the people that speak it.
for the alphabet, i'm sticking to the latin alphabet (english alphabet? *squints at google*) but dropping q, c, and x. c is being replaced by ch, which will be one letter (as in change or arch, not loch). h, tho, is staying, only to be a silent letter between vowels. it might end up not being silent if it starts a word, i'll decide later. finally, j is sort of a hard sound (jump, jog) at the beginning of a word, and softer in the middle/end (like french je, jardin). currently, i have no plans to include sh or th as letter combinations.
(pls forgive me, ipa hurts my brain but i'm trying to learn it, for now you get other things)
also, the h rule is necessary bc i'm making a rule that no two vowels can be next to each other, and all syllables have to be closed except the last one in a word. this is part of The Dyah Problem. i can either change it to being spelled dyha, and risk people unknowingly pronouncing the h, or i can throw an extra consonant in there instead, like dyja (or dyjah). will think on it.
there are going to be six vowels and eight vowel sounds: a -> short, as in father, law
e -> short, as in vet, bedding, OR long a, as in lame, wait*
i -> short, as in indigo, pin; OR long e, as in seen, peace
o -> long, as in over, so
u -> short, as in put, foot
y -> long i, as in lying, spire
*very rarely, e has a third sound, only when two e's at the end of a word are separated by one consonant, in which case it also takes a long e sound. this solves the problem of me pronouncing skalmere like the english "mere."
the different i and e sounds depend on whether it is at the beginning of a word or not. the first sound is if the vowel begins a word, the second is all other instances. this is because of how i pronounce "inari" and "skirasto" in my head.
i might tweak any/all of this down the line, but for now this seems like a good set of established sound rules.










