This article belongs to the lore of Eurth.

Walnerian orthography: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Added Fraktur orthography)
Line 134: Line 134:
*De {{color|#C60000|j}}úre ([[wikipedia:English language|English]]: "By the law", or simply ''[[wikipedia:De jure|de jure]]'')
*De {{color|#C60000|j}}úre ([[wikipedia:English language|English]]: "By the law", or simply ''[[wikipedia:De jure|de jure]]'')
*A{{color|#C60000|i}}nika{{color|#C60000|i}}t ([[wikipedia:English language|English]]: "Uniquity")
*A{{color|#C60000|i}}nika{{color|#C60000|i}}t ([[wikipedia:English language|English]]: "Uniquity")
==Fraktur orthography==
{{Infobox writing system
| name      = [[Walnerian language|{{Black|Walnerian}}]] fraktur alphabet
| altname  = Rósbérisses fraktúr alfabét<br>{{font|Rósbériſſes fraktúr alfabét|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}
| type      = Alphabet<!-- (see type options below) -->
| qid      =
<!-- The following three fields, prefixed SH (ShortHand), are used only if the type parameter is set as "shorthand" or "stenography": -->
| SHline    = <!-- ("light" or "heavy" - heavy-line shorthands distinguish thick and thin strokes) -->
| SHtype    = <!-- (see SHtype options below) -->
| SHform    = <!-- (see SHform options below) -->
| typedesc  = <!-- (For providing additional info after a general type) -->
| creator  = <!-- (Use instead of famN for artificially created writing systems) -->
| date      = <!-- (Date created) -->
| published = <!-- (Date published - for shorthands and script reforms) -->
| time      = <!-- (Time period during which system was in use) -->
| official script =
| languages =
*[[Walnerian language]]
| fam1      = [[wikipedia:Latin script|Latin script]]<!-- (Use famN to specify parent writing system/s. -->
| fam2      = [[wikipedia:Blackletter|Blackletter]]<!--  Up to 15 parent writing systems can be listed,
  ...          fam1 being the oldest.) -->
| fam15    =
| print    = <!-- (the print basis/model of a braille script} -->
| sisters  = <!-- (For sister writing systems here with common origin) -->
| children  = <!-- (For child writing systems) -->
| sample    = <!-- (Sample image, WITHOUT "Image:" prefix) -->
| imagesize = <!-- (Sample image's size) -->
| caption  = <!-- (Description of sample image) -->
| direction = <!-- writing direction; when empty: will be read from Wikidata -->
| direction comment =
| unicode  = <!-- (To specify a Unicode range) -->
| iso15924  = <!--  (Either the ISO 15924 four-letter code or number. Template will automatically display both) -->
| iso15924 note = <!-- (To specify more text on the ISO 15924 four-letter codes, e.g. variants, aliases) -->
| footnotes = <!--  (Some information about the writing system) -->
| ipa-note      = <!-- (set to "none" to cancel IPA warning) -->}}
In the case [[Walnerian language]] is to be written in [[wikipedia:Fraktur|Fraktur]], there are a bit different rules to orthography, creating the '''Walnerian Fraktur Orthography''' (Walnerian: ''Rósbérisses fraktúr ortografie''; in [[wikipedia:Blackletter|blackletter]] {{font|Rósbériſſes fraktúr ortografie|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}), which guides the rules only for if the font is of the [[wikipedia:Blackletter|blackletter]] family.
Contrary to the popular opinion, the Fraktur Orthography is not the older [[Walnerian language#Zusamëlfasunk|Zusamëlfasunk]] orthography, but developed from it independently relative to the main Walnerian orthography.
{| style="font-family:Arial Unicode MS; font-size:1.4em; border-color:black; border-width:1px; border-style:solid; border-collapse:collapse; background-color:#F8F8EF"
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|A a|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/a ~ ɑ/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Á á|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/aː ~ ɑː/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Æ æ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ɛː ~ æː/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|B b|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/b/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|C c|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ts/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Cſ cſ cs|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/tʃ/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|D d|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/d/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|E e|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ɛ ~ e/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|É é|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ɛː ~ eː/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|{{color|#808080|Ə}} ə|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ə ~ ◌̩/
|-
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|F f|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/f/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|G g|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ɡ/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|H h|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ɦ ~ h/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Ch ch|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/x/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|I i|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/i ~ ɪ/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Í í|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/iː ~ ɪː/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|J j|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/j/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|K k|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/k/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|L l|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/l/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|M m|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/m/
|-
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|N n|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/n/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|O o|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ɔ ~ o/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Ó ó|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ɔː ~ oː/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Œ œ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ɛː ~ œː/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|P p|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/p/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|{{color|#808080|Q q}}|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>{{color|#808080|/kv/}}
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|R r|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/r/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|{{color|#808080|<big><big>ꝛ</big></big>}} ꝛ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ʁ̩ ~ ə/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|S ſ s|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/s/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Sſ ſſ ſs|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/ʃ/
|-
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|T t|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/t/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|U u|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/u/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Ú ú|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/uː/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|V v|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/v/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|{{color|#808080|W w}}|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>{{color|#808080|/w/}}
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|{{color|#808080|X x}}|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>{{color|#808080|/ks/}}
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Y y|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/y ~ yː/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" | {{font|Z z|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>/z/
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" |
| style="width:4em; text-align:center; padding: 3px;" |
|}
Main difference from the main orthography is the preservation of the [[wikipedia:Long s|long S ({{font|ſ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}/ſ)]], vowel shift denotation symbols for shifts [[wikipedia:Æ|Ä→É ({{font|Æ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}/Æ)]] and [[wikipedia:Œ|Ö→É ({{font|Æ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}/Œ)]] and preservation of [[wikipedia:R rotunda|R rotunda (ꝛ)]] rather than introducing ŕ.
===Long and rounded S===
<div style="float:right; margin: 0 0 0.2em 0.2em; padding: 0.2em 0.6em; font: 350% sans-serif; line-height: 1.1em; background-color: #DDF; border: 1px solid #AAF;“>{{font|S ſ s|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}<br>{{font|S ſ s|font=sans-serif}}<br>{{font|S ſ s|font=serif}}</div>
The Fraktur orthography still uses both [[wikipedia:Long s|long]] and [[wikipedia:S|rounded]] S letters as a miniscule.
The rules on writing those are:
* [[wikipedia:Long s|Long S (ſ)]] is written, if it is on the beginning or in the middle of a syllable
* [[wikipedia:S|Rounded S (s)]] is written on the end of a syllable or if they act as a [[wikipedia:Syllabic consonant|syllabic consonant]]
Both [[wikipedia:S|rounded S (s)]] & [[wikipedia:Long s|long S (ſ)]], if [[wikipedia:Capitalization|capitalizated]], are written as a regular S
This applies to both digraphs including the letter S ({{font|Cſ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}/Cs & {{font|Sſ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}/Ss). Long S (ſ) is used again in the case, that the digraph stands on the beginning or the middle of a syllable, while Rounded S (s) is used if the digraphs stands on the end of a syllable or is syllabic.
The digraph {{font|ſs|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}/ss always uses the long S for the initial letter of the digraph, creating variants:
*{{font|Ss|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}} - For alone standing digraph Ss
*{{font|Sſ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}} - For the initial capitalised digraph Ss
*{{font|ſſ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}} - For the initial or medial letter of a syllable
*{{font|ſs|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}} - For the finial letter of a syllable
===Variants of the É===
Besides the regular {{font|Éé|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}/Éé, there are two more letters, the letter {{font|Ææ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}/[[wikipedia:Æ|Ææ]], which stands in the places, where the sound is equivalent version to the [[wikipedia:German language|Dolch]] sound Ä, and the letter {{font|Œœ|font=UnifrakturMaguntia}}/[[wikipedia:Œ|Œœ]], which stands in the places, where the sound is equivalent version to the [[wikipedia:German language|Dolch]] sound Ö. Those letters were used commonly in the regular orthography until mid 18th century.
{{Template:Walneria Navbox}}
{{Template:Walneria Navbox}}
{{Eurth}}
{{Eurth}}
[[Category:Walneria]]
[[Category:Walneria]]
[[Category:Eurth]]
[[Category:Eurth]]

Revision as of 13:46, 30 August 2021

The Walnerian orthography (Walnerian: Rósbérisse ortografie) is a set of rules, that guide the written form of the Walnerian language.

Alphabet

Walnerian alphabet
Rósbérisses alfabét
Chodowiecki Basedow Tafel 21 c Z.jpg
First ever Walnerian printing press, 1650's
Type
Alphabet
Languages
Parent systems
A a
/a ~ ɑ/
Á á
/aː ~ ɑː/
B b
/b/
C c
/ts/
Cs cs
/tʃ/
D d
/d/
E e
/ɛ ~ e/
É é
/ɛː ~ eː/
Ë ë
/ə ~ ◌̩/
F f
/f/
G g
/ɡ/
H h
/ɦ ~ h/
Ch ch
/x/
I i
/i ~ ɪ/
Í í
/iː ~ ɪː/
J j
/j/
K k
/k/
L l
/l/
M m
/m/
N n
/n/
O o
/ɔ ~ o/
Ó ó
/ɔː ~ oː/
P p
/p/
Q q
/kv/
R r
/r/
Ŕ ŕ
/ʁ̩ ~ ə/
S s
/s/
Ss ss
/ʃ/
T t
/t/
U u
/u/
Ú ú
/uː/
V v
/v/
W w
/w/
X x
/ks/
Y y
/y ~ yː/
Z z
/z/

Historical development

From a historical digraph alphabet, the script developed from the Early New High Dolch orthographies. The changes either follow the phonetic shifts (for example the phonetical shifts from /æ/ and /œ/ to /ɛː/, or shift from /a͡u/ to /ɔː/).

Changes in orthography without the phonetical shift include:

  • SS/ → S
  • S → Z
  • Z → C
  • Ü → Y

Later in the mid 17th century, accute was introduced for the long vowels, replacing the digraphs:

  • IE/IH/II → Í
  • AH/AA → Á
  • EH/EE → É
  • OH/OO → Ó
  • UH/UU → Ú

Current usage

R Accute

Ŕ ŕ
Ŕ ŕ

The letter R Accute (Ŕ) was introduced in early 19th century, replacing the digraph ER in cases, where the phonological shift /əˑʀ/ → /ʁ̩ ~ ə/ happened.

Digraphs

There are three digraphs in the Walnerian language (CS for /t͡ʃ/, CH for /x/, SS for /ʃ/). They are a remnant of the old digraph orthography and some people support their replacement with diacritic characters. The most popular of those proposal suggests replacing the digraphs with circumflexed letters C, H and S, possibly being inspired by Esperanto, which gained popularity in Walneria in mid 1950's.

  • Cs cs → Ĉ ĉ
  • Ch ch → Ĥ ĥ
  • Ss ss → Ŝ ŝ

E Diaeresis

Ë ë
Ë ë

The letter E Diaeresis (Ë) was introduced around the same time as the Accuted R (Ŕ), replacing the letter E in endings and other syllables, where it either became silent and another sound became syllabic, or the /ɛ/ sound was reduced to /ə/. The most common example may be the -ën ending in the infinite forms of the verbs. Examples of the words including multiple syllabic letters may be:

S vs. SS

Ss ss
Ss ss

In front of the letters P, T, if in the first syllable of a word, or a word compound, the letter SS, representing the /ʃ/ sound is written only as a S. Examples of the orthography may include:

First syllable of a word
Other syllables of a word
First syllables of a coumpound word
  • Hópstodál (English: "Capital city", IPA: /ɦɔːpʃtɔdaːl/)
  • Balspíl (English: "Ball game", IPA: /bɑlʃpiːl/)

J vs. I

J j
J j

For the sound /j/ behind a vowel, letter I is used instead of a J (That means that in -AJ- should be replaced with -AI-). This rule doesn't apply to the compound words or words of a foreign origin:

Fraktur orthography

Walnerian fraktur alphabet
Rósbérisses fraktúr alfabét
Rósbériſſes fraktúr alfabét
Type
Alphabet
Languages
Parent systems

In the case Walnerian language is to be written in Fraktur, there are a bit different rules to orthography, creating the Walnerian Fraktur Orthography (Walnerian: Rósbérisses fraktúr ortografie; in blackletter Rósbériſſes fraktúr ortografie), which guides the rules only for if the font is of the blackletter family.

Contrary to the popular opinion, the Fraktur Orthography is not the older Zusamëlfasunk orthography, but developed from it independently relative to the main Walnerian orthography.

A a
/a ~ ɑ/
Á á
/aː ~ ɑː/
Æ æ
/ɛː ~ æː/
B b
/b/
C c
/ts/
Cſ cſ cs
/tʃ/
D d
/d/
E e
/ɛ ~ e/
É é
/ɛː ~ eː/
Ə ə
/ə ~ ◌̩/
F f
/f/
G g
/ɡ/
H h
/ɦ ~ h/
Ch ch
/x/
I i
/i ~ ɪ/
Í í
/iː ~ ɪː/
J j
/j/
K k
/k/
L l
/l/
M m
/m/
N n
/n/
O o
/ɔ ~ o/
Ó ó
/ɔː ~ oː/
Œ œ
/ɛː ~ œː/
P p
/p/
Q q
/kv/
R r
/r/

/ʁ̩ ~ ə/
S ſ s
/s/
Sſ ſſ ſs
/ʃ/
T t
/t/
U u
/u/
Ú ú
/uː/
V v
/v/
W w
/w/
X x
/ks/
Y y
/y ~ yː/
Z z
/z/

Main difference from the main orthography is the preservation of the long S (ſ/ſ), vowel shift denotation symbols for shifts Ä→É (Æ/Æ) and Ö→É (Æ/Œ) and preservation of R rotunda (ꝛ) rather than introducing ŕ.

Long and rounded S

S ſ s
S ſ s
S ſ s

The Fraktur orthography still uses both long and rounded S letters as a miniscule.

The rules on writing those are:

Both rounded S (s) & long S (ſ), if capitalizated, are written as a regular S

This applies to both digraphs including the letter S (Cſ/Cs & Sſ/Ss). Long S (ſ) is used again in the case, that the digraph stands on the beginning or the middle of a syllable, while Rounded S (s) is used if the digraphs stands on the end of a syllable or is syllabic.

The digraph ſs/ss always uses the long S for the initial letter of the digraph, creating variants:

  • Ss - For alone standing digraph Ss
  • Sſ - For the initial capitalised digraph Ss
  • ſſ - For the initial or medial letter of a syllable
  • ſs - For the finial letter of a syllable

Variants of the É

Besides the regular Éé/Éé, there are two more letters, the letter Ææ/Ææ, which stands in the places, where the sound is equivalent version to the Dolch sound Ä, and the letter Œœ/Œœ, which stands in the places, where the sound is equivalent version to the Dolch sound Ö. Those letters were used commonly in the regular orthography until mid 18th century.