Liohne

Phonology
Liohne is a diacritic based orthography, in other words, the two or more letters represents a unique sound. Moreover, the alphabet has the following letters: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V X Y Z. Some graphic diacritics are used as the circumflex and accute accents (^,´). Apostrophe and hypen is also used as part of word structures (',-).

Consonants have certain rules. s sound is always s at the begining of the word but z when middle. The m and n are used for vowel diacritics, so h letter is used for differentiation.

The e letter have a double use: when the e is at the end of the syllable, it works as a gemination of the main vowel. This phenomenon will be explained further. Furthermore, there are glides [j,w] and diphtongues which also have unique graphemes.

Vowel gemination
Some kind of vowels are geminated and uses the grapheme e at the end of the syllable to mark the gemination. First of all, there is a estable syllable structure which is the following:

First Consonant => Vowel => Final Consonant => Gemination Tag

Always there is a consonant at the begining of the syllable, if it doesn't you add a apostrophe. This rules also applies at the final consonant but when the vowel is nasal the apostrophe may disappear. Examples:

Oure [œ̃:χ], Dy'e [di:], de [də], liohne [ɫjo:n], sl'eauce [sʎo:s], me' [mə:], celle [sə:l]

If the e is the vowel and there is no final consonant, don't add the final e but the apostrophe.