Provitano

General information
''Due to code restrictions, rather than using pointy brackets to represent orthography as per IPA standards, I will be using dashes on either side. ''

Provitan is a Western Romance Language that is spoken around Catalonia in Spain and in Western France. The Provitano spoken in Catalonia is the Western Variant (Llengua Prôvitana del hueste)) and the Provitano spoken in France is Eastern Variant (Llengua Provitana del Este). The Standard (Llengua Prôvitana Oficiala) is mainly based on the Western Variant. This usually comes in to play with some forms of words, word final vowels, and some pronunciation variations.

Note that while is says verbs conjugate for all 6 parts, they use synthetic forms for all people, moods, and numbers and most tenses but analitic forms for voice, some aspects and some tenses.

Consonants
-c- represents /k/ before consonants and letters -a o u- (and variants such as â, ò etc.) and /s/ before -e i y- (and variants such as ê, í etc.). Furthermore, -ç- is used before -a o u- for /s/ where necessary such as in ''feliç, feliços. ''always represents /s/.

The sound /ʃ/ is represented by the cluster -sc- before -e i y- (and variants) and -sç- before -a o u- (and variants) and by -ș- before a consonant. The sound /sk/ is represented by -sc- before -a o u- and variants and consonants and by -squ- before -e i y- and variants.

The sound /ʒ/ is represented by -g- before and variants and -j- before all else.

The sound /dʒ/ is represented by -tg- before and variants and -tj- before all else

†''[ʁ] is a dialectual variant of /r/ that occurs in Eastern Provitano. ''

Vowels
‡/ɔ/ occurs only in stressed syllables and has no long variant.

‡‡/ɑː/ occurs in place of /a:/ in the East.

/oː/ does not occur because due to a vowel shift, /oː/ shifted to /uː/ likewise /uː/ is not represented by -û- becuase the shift fronted that to /yː/.

Long vowels can occur in and out of stress syllables. Irregular stress is marked by an acute accent. The grave accent is only used on -ò- and works as states above.

Long vowels are represented with a circumflex and are usually realized as diphthongs. As follows:

â --aː ~ aɒ̯

æ̂ -- ɛː ~ ɛɪ̯

ê -- eː ~ eɪ̯ ~ aɛ̯

î -- iː ~ iɪ̯

ô -- uː ~ uʌ̯

ø̂ -- øː ~ øʏ̯

œ̂ -- œː ~ œɒ̯

û -- yː ~ yʏ̯

Alphabet
The alphabet does not include accents, circumflexes, or cedilla. It also does not include digraphs. In proper collating order the alphabet is:

a æ b c d e f g h i j k l m n o ø œ p q r s t u v w x y z (with -k- and -w- used only in borrowed words like kilowatt).

Note that -ø- comes after -o- and before -œ-.

There is also -á ǽ é í ó ǿ œ́ ú- which all mark stress on syllables in words where stress does not follow proper rules.

-ò- also exists to mark open /ɔ/ only in stressed syllables. (Note that /ɔ/ must always be marked even when stress on a word is predictable.)

Also long vowels are written -â æ̂ ê î ô ø̂ œ̂ û-.

Furthermore there are the digraphs: ch, ll, ny, tg, tj, sc, and sç, which are explained below section.

'''Please note: ae and oe ≠ æ and œ. These are different sounds and cannot be confused. '''

Diphthongs
Diphthongs are fairly straightforward when it comes to vowels:

With in a word vowels -a æ e o ò- can combine with -i- to form the respective falling diphthongs that is /aj ɛj ej oj ɔj/. The diphthong /uj/ does not exist and -ui- and -uy- are always realized as /wi/

In final positions or intervocalically, a -y- may be used instead of an -i-.

In any position -a æ e o ò- may combine with -u- to form the respective diphthongs, that is /aw ɛw ew ow ɔw/

Long vowels do not appear in diphthongs but can be realized as diphthongs.

Combinations such as -ae- or -oa- are not technically diphthongs and in careful speech are two seperate vowels, though in fast speech -e- acts as -i- and -o- acts as -u- to form diphthongs.

Consonant Clusters
In Latin, the initial clusters: -cl- -pl- -fl- -l- -bl- often palatalized in the Romance language. In Provitan, -cl- -pl- -fl- and -l- palatalize.

-cl- becomes -ch- pronounced /tʃ/. (Example: clamare ➜ chamá; Cf. Spanish llamar & Portuguese chamar).

-pl- becomes -pll- which is analyzed as /pʎ/ but realized as /ʎ/ in the West and /pj/ in the East. (Example: plenus ➜ plleno; Cf. Spanish lleno & Portuguese cheio).

-fl- becomes -fr- pronounced /fr/. (Example: flama ➜ frama; Cf. Spanish llama & Portuguese chama).

-l- becomes -ll- pronounced /ʎ/. (Example: lavar ➜ llavá; Cf. Catalan llavar).

These are not universal in the Romance languages. For example -pl- -cl- and -fl- mutations are unheard of in Catalan and -l- mutations are less common in Spanish while being heavily present in Catalan. Furthermore, -bl- mutations occur in Italian but not in Spanish (hence Italian bianco but Spanish blanco).

These mutations do not occur in borrowed words which often are taken directly from Latin and have slightly different meanings. In Spanish, for example, there is lleno "full" and pleno "broad" which both come from Latin plenus except that lleno evolved and pleno was borrowed.

Furthermore, in many cases, -ct- around vowels mutates as well. In Italian, this is seen as -tt- such as in ''otto, dottore, Vittoria, aspettare. In Spanish, this is less common but can be seen in ocho, and to a lesser extent in fruto''. In French and Catalan there is huit and ''fruit. ''

In Provitan, this mutation occurs differently in the East and West.

Western Mutations

act ➜ ach

ect ➜ ech (as in aspectare ➜ aspechá)

ict ➜ ich

oct ➜ och (as in octo ➜ ocho)

uct ➜ uch (as in fructus ➜ frucho)

Eastern Mutations 

act ➜ ait

ect ➜ eit (as in aspectare ➜ aspeitá)

ict ➜ eit

oct ➜ oit (as in octo ➜ oito) 

uct ➜ oit (as in fructus ➜ froito)

Digraphs
-ch- whcih makes the /tʃ/ sound.

-sc/sç- which makes teh /ʃ/ sound.

-tg/tj- which makes the /dʒ/ sound.

-ny- which makes a /ɲ/ sound.

-ll- which makes a /ʎ/ sound.

Nouns
Nouns, like most Romance Languages, have no case but do have gender and can be singular or plural. Nouns may be either masculine or feminine and there is a small class of nouns which are irregular that are occasionally called neuter but are technically masculine.

Nouns usually pluralize with -s, -es, or -os. There are some exceptions however which mainly come from stem changing neuters in Latin (these nouns usually pluralize with -inés or -orés). Nouns endings in -a pluralize as -es. Nouns ending in other vowels take a +s. Nouns ending in consonants add +os if masc. and +es if fem.

Examples:

estudí "study" -- estudís "studies"

amante "lover" -- amantes "lovers"

ragazo "child" -- ragazos "children"

pae "father" -- paes "fathers/parents"

país "country" -- paísos "countries"

œll "eye" -- œllos "eyes"

idea "idea" -- idees "ideas"

donya "lady" -- donyes "ladies"

animal "animal" -- animalos "animals"

muller "wife" -- mulleres "wives"

adúlt "adult" -- adultos "adults"

Irregulars:

hom "man" -- hominés "men"

nom "name" -- nominés "names"

temp "time" -- temporés "times"

corp "body" -- corporés "bodies"

òp "work" -- oporés "works"

Nouns also change for feminine and masculine gender.

Some are specialized like pae/mae or muller/marto but most can be derived.

When a noun is masculine that ends in a consonant or -i-, it becomes feminine by adding +a.

Examples:

adúlt m. -- adulta f. (singular)

adultos m. -- adultes f. (plural)

When a noun ends in an -o- the -o- changes to -a.

Examples:

ragazo m. -- ragaza f. (singular)

ragazos m. -- ragazes f. (plural)

Nouns ending in -e- do not change and can be either masculine or feminine.

amante m/f (singular) 

amantes m/f (plural)