Nomækeléet

Nomægeléet or Nomækeléet is spoken by the Nomækelé Empire - and many other vassal states - at Keléshtevadaran ("planet Kelesh", nearest to the planet Gelo, and is known to the Geloans as "Mezuhar", "the brilliant one"), which still remains in a technological level somewhat similar to Earth's superpowers. Due to its widespread use throughout the planet, it has several dialects that have from minor differences a the stress on syllabes to major changes in consonants and vowels pronounciations and grammatical simplifications.

It is a language that seems to have no known ancestry in Earth languages' family tree, as is the case with Yisrelit, Ekroneké and some other minor languages. Its writting system derives from a previous hyerogliphic-like script and, even though the language is almost a syllabary-style, it is actually an abjad, with ideogram-looking letters marking consonantal sounds with vowels attached beneath them. A simplier, alphabet-like script has arrised in recent decades among the not-so-educated people, but this has been called as "a gross simplification of the language and a idioticization of the children".

Etymology
The word "nomækelé" is a junction of two words: "nómæ" (thriving) and "kelé/gelé" ("land"). And "Keleshtevadarán" (planet Kelé) is a junction of "kelé" with "tevadaran" (planet; "tevadar" means "star"), and the "sh" is the particle of naming, used when uniting names to nouns (as in Keleshtevadarán and Warashtevadár, meaning "planet of Kelé" and "star of Wará").

Consonants
The spoken language has 26 consonantal phonemes, but only 23 letters and one of them is a simple mute letter just to sign where a vowel should be spoken, thus leaving 22 letters to represent all the phonemes.

In many dialects some phonemes merged and the interchangeable phonemes disappeared, being used the easiest one to pronounce, as "q" merged into "k", "ɱ" into "m", "ɲ" into "n" and "đ" into "d". It is not the same to all dialects, as some merged all of them and others had only one or two merges. In some dialects, "r" and "ɹ", "f" and "ϕ", "v" and "β" are also used as interchangeable, but written with different standard symbols to preserve the root of the word. At least in one small dialect, "ϕ", "β" and "v" merged into "f" completely (alongside all the previous merges mentioned above).

These are the interchangeable phonemes for the standard:

• Phoneme "k" (in most dialects it is pronounced as "g", but not at the capital) is pronounced always in a stressed syllabe, as well as in unstressed syllabes with "a", "æ" and "e". In unstressed syllabes with "o" and "u", it sounds like "q" (make with the back of the throat).

• Phoneme "ɱ" is used only at the beginning of the words, except with "æ". All other cases, "m" is used.

• Phoneme "ɲ" is used only at the beginning of the words, except with "æ". All other cases, "n" is used.

• Phoneme "đ" is used in stressed syllabes, but never at the end of a word. For all other cases, "d" is used.

Vowels
It has also five vowels (the "i" vowel doesn't exist in any dialect), with two aditional diacritic symbols marking a) a repetition of the previous vowel (which is always a stressed syllabe) and b) a mute consonant.

Letter-phoneme correspondents
This image correlates the letters to the phonemes used for each letter and diacritical symbol, as well as the symbols for end of a word and end of a phrase. Note that the repetition symbol stresses the sylable. This table shows according to High Nomækeléet writting and speech.

Below is a table showing the correspondence between High Nomækeléet and Low Nomækeléet script. The vowels are just the same as in HM script, but written to the side of the consonant instead of under it.



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