User:Osswix/sandbox/byage

vowels
vowels occur in both short and long counterparts.

Syllables and moræ
A syllable can be (c(m))v(f)

where c(consonant) is any consonant, m(medial) is /β/, /l/, /j/ or /ɣ/, v(vowel) is any vowel and f(final) is /m/, /n/, /ŋ/, /β/, /l/, /j/ or /ɣ/.

a nasal ( /m/, /n/ or /ŋ/ ) can also form a "full syllable"

scheme of length of pronounciation where 1 unit is 1 mora

* medials tend to evenly spread on the consonant and vowel moras.

allophony
[b] [d] and [g] are allophones of /β/, /j/ and /ɣ/ respectively when before a medial consonant, in the same context /l/ changes into [n] (βja > bja) /j/ and /ɣ/ are deleted before /t/ and /k/ respectively to form geminiated forms of those stops. (najta > natta)

Stress/pitch accent
The stress and pitch accent is lexical and is set to a single word, in some otherwise homophonic words the pitch accent is used to seperate those words. The following patterns are the most common patterns in tones, but there might be exceptions.