Merican

Merican is the General American English of the mid to late 21st century. All other English countries have a phonetic alphabet, except for the United States. The US did; however, make some spelling changes. Such as America and American becoming Merica and Merican. It still is far from phonetic. There are several new sounds used, such as a phonetic glottal stop, alveolar tap, and some syllabic consonants. Verb conjugations are now part of the standard speech.

Consonants
ŋ- Only used in between words. Such as English and Singin' (Singing)

Consonants lost- θ (replaced with f) ð (replaced with d or ɾ) h (lost in all contexts) ʍ (replaced with w)

Consonants added- ʔ (replaced t in some contexts) ɫ (replaced l) ɹ̠ (replaced ɹ) ɾ (replaced t and d in some contexts)

Aspirated stops- replaced unvoiced stops

Syllabic consonants- m̩ (replaced əm) n̩ (replaced word final ŋ) ɫ̩ (replaced əl) ɹ̠̩ (replaced all rhotacized vowels)

Vowels
ə and ʌ- No longer distinguished as separate vowels

Vowels lost- All rhotacized vowels (replaced with ɹ̠̩) ɔ (replaced with ɑ)

Vowels added- None

Diphthongs- eɪ oʊ aɪ ɔɪ aʊ (no changes)