Phyrean language
| Phyrean | |
|---|---|
| High Phyrean | |
| Ffwyrdunwyrh | |
| Pronunciation | [ˈfuɨ̯rdɨnuɨ̯r̥] |
| Region | Most of Phyrea |
| Ethnicity | Continental Avannians |
| Era | 1260 ANB - Present |
Namuno-Ethian
| |
Early forms | |
| Phyrean script | |
| Official status | |
Official language in | Official language
Working language |
Phyrean (Ffwyrdunwyrh [ˈfuɨ̯rdɨnuɨ̯r̥]) is an Avannic language spoken throughout southern upper Phyrea and parts of lower Phyrea, as well as ex-colonies of the Kingdom of Amrhyl. It is the main language of commerce in the northern hemisphere, and compounded with the ex-colonial territories it has been introduced to, it has arguably become a global lingua franca.
History
Phyrean and its dialects are Continental Avannic languages, of the broader Namuno-Ethian family. The earliest evidence found of Early Old Phyrean, the first true form of the language, is a eulogistical inscription on a gravestone dated to around 80 BNB. The text is presented below, with a translation into Literary Standard Phyrean.
EWLAWN:AVANŌR:ROWFŌR:L[E]N:MOXW:L[E]N:N[E]XW:L[E]N:PĀRW
Ewlawn Afanór ar rwff, len mochw, len nechw, len mhárw.
"To Afan the Night you go, my soul, my blood, my girl."
The colons (:) are added to ease parsing, separating words–they were not present in the original, as early inscriptions made no use of spaces or punctuation. Unwritten <e> is added in the transliteration, as it is customary of phyrean orthography to skip this letter within words.
Phonology
Consonants
There are a total of 24 consonants in Phyrean, counting the ones only appearing in initial mutations.
| Labial / Labiodental | Alveolar / Dental / Linguodental | Lateral | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unvoiced | Voiced | Unvoiced | Voiced | Unvoiced | Voiced | |||||
| Nasal | mh /m̥/[1] | m /m/ | nh /n̥/[2] | n /n/ | ngh /ŋ̊/[3] | ng /ŋ/ | ||||
| Plosive | p /p/ | b /b/ | t /t/ | d /d/ | c /k/ | g /g/ | ||||
| Fricative | Plain | ff (ph[4]) /f/ | f /v/ | th /θ/ | dd /ð/ | ll /ɬ/ | ch /x/ | h /h/ | ||
| Sibilant | s /s/ | |||||||||
| Trill | rh /r̥/ | r /r/ | ||||||||
| Approximant | w /w/ | l /l~ɫ/ | i~j /j/ | (w /w/) | ||||||
There are traditional naming conventions for the sounds found in the language, often documented in older grammars:
- The hard struck sounds: p, t, c
- The soft struck sounds: b, d, g
- The hard whispered sounds: ff, th, s, ch, h
- The soft whispered sounds: f, dd
- The rough rolling sounds: ll, rh
- The soft rolling sounds: l, r
- The narrow sounds: m, n (sometimes mh, nh, ng, ngh are included, though not always, as they either occur rarely or due to initial mutations)
Vowels
The Phyrean language has seven written vowels: a, e, i, o, u, w and y, with lengthened counterparts marked with a diacritic (á, é, í, etc.).
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Close | i /i/ • í /i:/ | y~u /ɨ/ • ý~ú /ɨ:/ | w /ʊ/ • ẃ /u:/ |
| Mid | e /e/ • é /e:/ | o /o/ • ó /o:/ | |
| Open | a /a/ • á /a:/ |
Audibly, the vowels u and y are identical, but never interchangeable in writing, exemplified by the word “blue” below.
- llulud incorrect
- llylyd incorrect
- llylud incorrect
- llulyd correct form
Diphthongs
It’s important to note that most diphthongs have their stress on the first vowel. Below is a table of possible diphthongs. Any combinations not listed in the table may still occur, but will not be considered diphthongs. Although not listed, lengthened counterparts are valid first vowel components.
| Second vowel | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First vowel | a | e | i | o | u/y | w |
| a | - | ae /aɨ̯/ | ai /ai̯/ | - | au /aɨ̯/ | aw /au̯/ |
| e | - | - | ei /ei̯/ | - | eu /eɨ̯/ | ew /eu̯/ |
| i | ia /i̯a/ | ie /i̯e/ | - | io /i̯o/ | iu /iɨ̯/ | iw /iu̯/ |
| o | - | oe /oɨ̯/ | oi /oi̯/ | - | ou /oɨ̯/ | ow /ou̯/ |
| u/y | - | - | - | - | - | yw~uw /ɨu̯/ |
| w | wa /u̯a/ | we /u̯e/ | wi /u̯i/ | wo /u̯o/ | wy~wu /uɨ̯~u̯ɨ/ | - |
Stress
Stress in phyrean is almost always present in the penultimate (in bisyllables) or antepenultimate (in polysyllables) syllable, except in words beginning with hy- or y-, which have their accent after the first syllable.
- Aniddun /ˈaniðɨn/ "Anidon"
- máharth /ˈma:harθ/ "watcher"
- hyfer /hɨˈver/ "all, every"
- hyforyd /hɨˈvorɨt/ "other, another"
Initial mutations
As with other of its close Avannic relatives, Phyrean has a system of initial mutations, similar to those of Hogharryan, its closest relative. However, they developed differently and in different circumstances to the initial mutations found in other relatives like Stockardian, insomuch as the phonological processes leading to them were not the same. The consonants able to assume initial mutations are the struck sounds (p, t, c, b, d, g), the narrow sounds (m, n) and the rough rolling sounds (ll, rh). Vowels (and thus also diphthongs) may also assume two kinds of initial mutation, and h has a unique mutation that only occurs in specific compounds.
| Base form | Smooth | Narrow | Whispered | Compounding |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| b /b/ | f /v/ | m /m/ | - | - |
| d /d/ | dd /ð/ | n /n/ | - | - |
| g /g/ | Elided | ng /ŋ/ | - | - |
| p /p/ | b /b/ | mh /m̥/ | ph /f/ | - |
| t /t/ | d /d/ | nh /n̥/ | th /θ/ | - |
| c /k/ | g /g/ | ngh /ŋ̊/ | ch /x/ | - |
| m /m/ | f /v/ | - | - | - |
| n /n/ | dd /ð/ | - | - | - |
| ll /ɬ/ | l /l/ | - | - | - |
| rh /r̥/ | r /r/ | - | - | - |
| vowels | f-V /vV/ | n-V /nV/ | - | - |
| h /h/ | - | - | - | g /g/ |
Dialects

Vowel realisations
The chart below shows the differing vowel realisations found in various major Phyrean dialects or "accents."
| Standard | [a] | [a:] | [e] | [e:] | [i] | [i:] | [o] | [o:] | [ʊ] | [u:] | [ɨ] | [ɨ:] | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capital | Levon | [a] | [a:] | [e] | [e:] | [i] | [i:] | [o] | [o:] | [ʊ] | [u:] | [ɨ] | [ɨ:] |
| Llyd-an-Járth | [ɑ:] | [ɛ:] | [ɔ:] | ||||||||||
| Amrhylian | East | [ɛ] | [ɔ] | [ə] | |||||||||
| West | [ɑ] | [e] | [ɪ] | [o] | [ɨ] | ||||||||
| Hogharrhyan | Coastal | [a] | [a:] | [i] | [u] | [i] | [i:] | ||||||
| Lowland | [ɛ] | [ɔ] | |||||||||||
| Midland | [aʊ̯] | [e] | [eɪ̯] | [ɪ] | [ɪi̯] | [o] | [oʊ̯] | [əʊ̯] | [ɪ] | [ɪi̯] | |||
| Highland | [ɛa̯] | [eɪ̯] | [ɔa̯] | [ʊ] | [eɪ̯] | ||||||||
| Nemmark-Blackstradian | East Nemmish | [ɐ] | [a:] | [ɛ] | [ɛ:] | [i:] | [ɔ] | [ɔ:] | [u:] | [ɨ] | [ɨ:] | ||
| Central Nemmish | [a] | [ɔ:] | [e] | [æ:] | [ɛ:] | [o] | [ɪ] | [ɛ:] | |||||
| West Nemmish | [ɛ:] | [ɤ:] | |||||||||||
| North Blackstradian | [ɐ] | [a:] | [i:] | [ɤ] | [ɨ] | [ɨ:] | |||||||
| South Blackstradian | [æ] | [æ:] | [ɛ] | [i] | [ɔ] | [ə] | [u:] | [ɪ] | [ɪ:] | ||||
Variant vocabulary
The chart below shows variations in vocabulary in various Phyrean dialects.
| Meaning | Capital | Amrhylian | Hogharrhyan | Nemmark-Blackstradian | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Levon | Llyd-an-Járth | East | West | Coastal | Lowland | Midland | Highland | East N. | Central N. | West N. | North B. | South B. | |
| Fox | Ceddyn | Mabyn | Jab | ||||||||||
| Stative be, ind. perf. | Ena | Naf | Enaf | Naf | Na | ||||||||
| Eventive be, ind. perf. | Yra | Raf | Yraf | Raf | Ra | ||||||||
| Become, ind. perf. | Ryma | Ymaf | Rymaf | Ymaf | Yma | Ma | |||||||
| Stative be, opt. past | Fawn | Fon | Fawn | Fon | Fawn | Fon | Fan | ||||||
| Eventive be, opt. past | Yrfawn | Yrfon | Yrfawn | Yrfon | Yrfawn | Yrfon | Yrfan | ||||||
| Become, opt. past | Ymawn | Ymon | Ymawn | Ymon | Ymawn | Ymon | Yman | ||||||
| King | Járth | Hiaharth | Járth | Hiaharth | Hiaharth | Hiárth | |||||||
| Hello | Leo | Gwyl | |||||||||||
| Wolf | Marth | Thyr | Marth | Thyr | |||||||||
| Now | Anrw | Anw | Nw | Rw | Arwn | Arw | Rw | ||||||
Levon dialect
The Levon dialect of Phyrean is the basis for the standardised language, and it differs little in phonology and grammar. The colloquial vocabulary, however, presents terms not found in other varieties, or meanings that deviate from Standard Phyrean.
- wosh, wossh "cool"
- ffyth "arse" (from ffythain "peach")
- llyrddan "to give" (normally "to share")
Llyd-an-Járth dialect
The dialect spoken in and around the city of Llyd-an-Járth used to be the prestige dialect for most of early Phyrean history up until the declaration of Levon as the capital in 1204. It is peculiar in that it, like the West Amrhylian dialects, makes use of the honorific second person pronoun on in informal speech.
West Amrhylian dialects
West Amrhylian dialects are known for making use of the honorific second person pronoun on as an informal pronoun. It also makes further distinctions between long and short vowels, employing a pattern of prosodic lengthening unique to the area, seen below.
| Historical vowel length | Closed syllable | Open syllable | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plosive coda | Dental or alveolar coda | Nasal or [NC] coda | Liquid or [LC] coda | |||
| Unvoiced | Voiced | |||||
| Historically short | Short
nwg /nʊk/ "knee" |
Coda lengthened
rhath /r̥ɑθ:/ "bone" |
Semi-long
maf /mɑˑv/ "it is short" |
Coda lengthened
hin /hɪn:/ "without" |
Coda lengthened
hwl /hʊɫ:/ "leaf" |
Semi-long
be /bɛˑ/ "for" |
| Historically long | Short
thág /θɑk/ "tile" |
Short, coda lengthened
géff /gef:/ "oxbow lake" |
Long
lédd /lɛ:ð/ "hall" |
Overlong
pán /pɑ::n/ "autumn" |
Long
pár /pɑ:r/ "girl" |
Overlong
mé /mɛ::/ "self" |
East Amrhylian dialects
East Amrhylian dialects present some influence from Ascon in their vocabulary and phonology, most notably in their vowel realisations.