Reskwai

Consonants

 * the ñ in prenasalized and non-velar nasal consonants can be writen as n for simplification
 * voiced fricatives are approximants when between vowels but not at the begining of the word
 * when glottal stop is the first letter of the word, the ' is not writed but still pronounced

Vowels
Diphtongs: there are ony falling diphtongs
 * /a/ is pronounced ɑ in back-falling diphtongs and after a labio-velar consonant
 * front-falling diphtongs can't be after a palatal consonant, in the same syllable
 * back-falling diphtongs can't be after a labio-velar consonant, in the same syllable

Alphabet
m p b f v n t d th dh r l ñ k g h q c j x y w s z

Phonotactics
The phonotactic is very basic and common. Words can have up to three syllables. Syllable structure: CV

C can be any consonant, and V can be a vowel or a diphtong
 * mono-syllabic words can't have prenasalized or presibilantized consonants

Stress
Stressed syllable is determined by the weight of syllables. The heavier syllables is stressed.

The weight is determined by the consonant and the presence/absence of diphtong:
 * if the syllable has a diphtong, its weight is increased by 2 if front-falling or 1 if back-falling
 * if more than one are the syllables with the highests weight level, the one that has a front vowel is stressed; if two or more have front vowel the last of them is stressed