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Re: "Roumant", or whatever it will be called. PART I

From:Christophe Grandsire <christophe.grandsire@...>
Date:Monday, October 23, 2000, 12:46
En réponse à Nik Taylor <fortytwo@...>:

> Christophe Grandsire wrote: > > é: /e/ > > How do you mark stressed /e/? > > > ò: /O/ > > How do you mark stressed /O/? > > And is there any way of marking stressed nasalized vowels, or do those > not exist? >
I will answer to the three questions at the same time. I suppose you meant everywhere "UNstressed" :) . Well, I may not have been clear. I said that accented vowels and diphtongs are "generally stressed". It means that they are often stressed, but they can also be unstressed. One simple case is when there are two or more accented vowels and/or diphtongues in the same word. In this case, only one can be stressed, and there is no way to know which one through the orthography. But even when the accented vowel or the diphtongue is alone in the word, it can still be unstressed, but generally those occurences are predictable. For instance, the ending for the 3rd person plural present of the 1st conjugation of verbs '-am' /a~/ is never stressed, but that's because stress position depends on conjugation, and not on the actual orthography. Another example is the ordinal numbers in "-ésime" /e'zim/ (like "vigésime" /viZe'zim/: twentieth) which are not stressed on the "é", but it's perfectly predictable. Finally it can also be unpredictable, like in the word "trêdice" /trE'dis/: thirteen, which is stressed on the last syllable despite the "ê". I told you that stress position was only partially predictable from the orthography :) . As for /e/, as its only marks are "ae" (rare) and "é", "é" is quite often used even in unstressed position. For /O/, it can be marked by a simple "o" followed by two consonnants or more (or one consonnant at the end of a word), which in this case is often unstressed. Finally, as for nasalized vowels, when they appear unstressed there's generally another accented letter or another diphtongue in the word which catches the stress.
> > ou followed by another vowel (or o when followed by a or i): /w/ > > Do you mean that <oua> and <oui> never occur? >
No, they can occur. I just meant that when "o" is followed by "a" or "i", it is pronounced /w/.
> > cu: /k/ in front of e, i > > Interesting. >
I got the idea from Italian, which uses 'ch' in front of e and i to mark /k/. But I wanted to use "u" instead of "h", to make a parallel with "gu" as in French and Spanish.
> > qu: /k/ in front of e, i (equivalent of 'cu') > > What determines whether <cu> or <qu> is used? >
Etymology :) . Some words use "cu", others use "qu". The only place where it is consistent is for interrogative adverbs and pronouns/adjectives, when they are identical to relative or subjunctive words. In this case, the interrogative is written with "qu", while the conjunction is written with "cu". For instance, "when" is /ka~/, written "quend" as an interrogative adverb, and "cuend" as a conjunction. In the same way, "who" is /k9~/, written "queum" as an interrogative pronoun and "cueum" as a relative pronoun. This kind of alternance is like the use of the acute accent on Spanish adverbs and pronouns, when they are used interrogatively (like ¿cómo?: how? vs. como: like).
> > sh: /S/, rare > > Is it used in any native words, or only in loan words? >
Only loanwords I think. But as I still don't have any word containing this digraph, I cannot be completely sure.
> > masculine singular: e /@/ > > feminine singular: a /a/ > > masculine plural: ès /E/ > > feminine plural: as /a/ > > There is also the neuter article o: /o/, used to use adjectives or > verbs as > > nouns, or in other cases where English would use a demonstrative. > > In front of a vowel or h + vowel, e, a and o become l' /l/ > > Oooh, I like that, synchronically opaque alternation e/l', a/l', o/l'. > :-) >
I like it too :) .
> > masculine singular: um /9~/ > > feminine singular: une /yn/ > > masculine plural: ums /9~/ > > feminine plural: unes /yn/ > > And how are singular and plurals distinguished in speach? >
By liaison, which works as in French, and has the "-s" pronounced in some circumstances (in this case it's pronounced /z/).
> > masculine: ne /n@/ > > feminine: na /na/ > > What's the origin of these? _en e_ or something like that? >
exactly! They are identical to the contracted forms of _em e_, _em a_, or _im e_, _im a_ (from which they come from is unclear, both "em" and "im" have the same contracted forms with the articles). Christophe.