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Renian orthography

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The Renian orthography (Gadori: Gadoꭈiʃe Orħografi or Gadoꭈiʃe Reȝtʃreibuŋ) is a set of rules, that guide the written form of the Renian language.

Alphabet

Renian alphabet
Reniʃes Alfabet
Lutherbibel.jpg
The Luħeꭈbibel from 1533
Type
Alphabet
Languages
Created1850
Published
1854
Parent systems
A a
/a ~ ä/
Ɒ ɒ
/ɒ ~ ʌ/
Ꞛ ꞛ
/ɛ ~ æ/
B b
/b/
C c
/t͡s/
Ƈ ƈ
/t͡ʃ/
D d
/d/
E e
/e/
F f
/f/
G g
/g/
H h
/ɦ ~ h/
Ħ ħ
/θ ~ ð/
Ȝ ȝ
/x/
I i
/i/
J j
/ʝ ~ j/
K k
/k/
L l ɭ
/l ~ ɭ/
M m
/m/
M̂ m̂
/m̩/
N n
/n/
N̂ n̂
/n̩/
Ŋ ŋ
/ŋ/
O o
/ɔ ~ o/
Ꞝ ꞝ
/œ ~ ɞ/
P p
/p/
Q q
/q/
R r ꭈ
/ʀ ~ r/
S s ſ
/z/
ẞ ß
/s/
Ʃ ʃ ȷ
/ʃ ~ ʒ/
T t
/t/
U u
/u/
Ꞟ ꞟ
/y ~ ɨ/
V v
/v/
Ƿ ƿ
/w/
X x
/ks/
Y y
/ɪ/
Z z
/d͡z/
Official version Diacritic version Digraph version IPA Symbol Example of a common word with the sound
1 A a A a A a About this sound/a/ After
2 Å å Å å Ao ao About this sound/ɒ/ Not
3 Ä ä Ae ae About this sound/æ/ Bed
4 B b B b B b About this sound/b/ Label
5 C c C c C c About this sound/ʦ/ Its
6 Ƈ ƈ Č č Tsch Tsch About this sound/ʧ/ Check
7 D d D d D d About this sound/d/ Done
8 E e E e E e About this sound/e/ Bed (Australian accent)
9 F f F f F f About this sound/f/ Fine
10 G g G g G g About this sound/ɡ/ Game
11 H h H h H h About this sound/ɦ/
About this sound/h/
Hello
12 Ħ ħ Ĥ ĥ Th th About this sound/ð/
About this sound/θ/
This / Thin
13 Ȝ ȝ Ȟ ȟ Ch ch About this sound/x/ Velar fricative (not in common: examples: voiceless / voiced)
14 I i I i I i About this sound/i/ Free
15 J j J j J j About this sound/j/ You
16 K k K k K k About this sound/k/ Key
17 L l L l L l About this sound/l/ Later
ɭ ĺ About this sound/ɭ/ Not in common. Example: "Sorl" in Swedish
18 M m M m M m About this sound/m/ Mother
19 About this sound/m̩/ Impressionism
20 N n N n N n About this sound/n/ Month
21 About this sound/n̩/ Even
22 Ŋ ŋ Ň ň Ng ng About this sound/ŋ/ Doing
23 O o O o O o About this sound/o/
About this sound/ɔ/
Yawn / Not
24 Ö ö Oe oe About this sound/œ/ Bird (General New Zealand)
25 P p P p P p About this sound/p/ Play
26 Q q Q q Q q /k͡v/ A bigram of /k/ and /v/, for example in Question
27 R r R r R r About this sound/ʀ/ Red (Northumbrian dialect)
ŕ About this sound/r/ Bright
28 S s S s S s About this sound/s/ Zoo
ſ
29 ß ß ß About this sound/s/ Surprise
30 Ʃ ʃ Š š Sch sch About this sound/ʃ/ Show
ȷ ž About this sound/ʒ/ Pleasure
31 T t T t T t About this sound/t/ Time
32 U u U u U u About this sound/u/ Boot
33 Ü ü Ue ue About this sound/y/
About this sound/ɨ/
Few (Multicultural London)
34 V v V v V v About this sound/v/ Valve
35 Ƿ ƿ Ƿ ƿ W w About this sound/w/ Weep
36 X x X x X x /k͡s/ A bigram of /k/ and /s/, for example in Maximal
37 Y y Y y Y y About this sound/ɪ/ Bit (General American)
38 Z z Z z Z z About this sound/ʣ/ Voiced alveolar affricate (not in common)

Former orthographies

Ꞛ ꞛ
Ꞛ ꞛ
Ɑ ɑ
Ɑ ɑ
Ꞝ ꞝ
Ꞝ ꞝ
Ꞟ ꞟ
Ꞟ ꞟ

In the older orthographies, notably back in the Baroque and Rococo, special symbols were used for Å, Ä, Ö and Ü. Those symbols later fell into disuse after the more wide spread of the typewriter, which did not include such symbols. Similar thing happened around the same time in neighboring languages, specifically the Louzen language.

The changes were:

Even today, there are some enthusiasts using the old letters for umlauts (Ꞛ, Ꞝ and Ꞟ) in a revivalist hope to bring them back (although the letter Ɑ is ignored even by them).

Digraph orthography

Back in the middle ages, the Renian language used a digraph (polygraph) orthography. Some notable examples include:

  • Ae (or lignature Æ) for present-day Ä
  • Ao (or lignature Ꜵ) for present-day Å
  • Oe (or lignature Œ) for present-day Ö
  • Ue (or lignature UEcapital.svg) for present-day Ü
  • Tsch for present-day Ƈ
  • Th for present-day Ħ
  • Ch for present-day Ȝ
  • lj for present-day miniscule form ɭ
  • Ng for present-day Ŋ
  • rr for present-day miniscule form ꭈ
  • Sz (at the time written as ſʒ), which evolved into ẞ
  • Sch for present-day Ʃ

Many of those symbols fell into disuse, with shifts, that are no longer used, including:

  • Ae aeÆ æꞚ ꞛ
  • Ao aoꜴ ꜵⱭ ɑ
  • Oe oeŒ œꞜ ꞝ
  • Ue ueUEcapital.svgꞞ ꞟ

Current orthography rules

Letters with more miniscule forms

Letter L

L l ɭ
L l ɭ

The letter L has two miniscule variants:

  • The short "l": Represents the sound /l/
  • The long "ɭ": Represents the sound /ɭ/

Both capitalized are written as "L", the first letter is always read alveolary (/l/)

Letter R

R r ꭈ
R r ꭈ

The letter R has two miniscule variants:

  • The soft "r": Represents the sound /ʀ/
  • The hard "ꭈ": Represents the sound /r/

Both capitalized are written as "R", the first letter is always read alveolary (/r/)

Letter S

S s ſ
S s ſ

The letter S has two miniscule variants. Unlike the other groups, there is no difference in pronunciation, only in location:

  • The short "s" is written in the middle or on the beginning of a syllable
  • The long "ſ" is written on the end if a syllable

Both capitalized are written as "S"

Letter Ʃ

Ʃ ʃ ȷ
Ʃ ʃ ȷ

The letter Ʃ has two miniscule variants:

  • The soft "ʃ": Represents the voiceless variant (/ʃ/)
  • The hard "ȷ": Represents the voiced variant (/ʒ/)

Both capitalized are written as "Ʃ", the first letter is always read voicelessly (/ʃ/)

Letter ẞ

ẞ ß
ẞ ß

The letter (ẞ) was created by a lignature of the letters long S (ſ) and tailed Z (ʒ), which were later merged into a single character. This also explains the name "Eßset"

Sz modern.svg

Syllabic leters

M̂ m̂
M̂ m̂
N̂ n̂
N̂ n̂

There are two letters for syllabic consonants: the syllabic M (/m̩/) and syllabic N (/n̩/).