Leerish

''' The creator of Leerish, Aryo Nazaradeh, asks of all not to alter this page in any way. ''' The Leerish language is still undergoing construction of its foundation. Some details may be inconsistent. Comments and concerns are welcome. Leerish (natively lheere [ˈɬəɦəɾə]) is an experimental language, created in 2015 by Aryo Nazaradeh, based on the idea of having only one vowel. The language was first introduced in its proto stage by Nazaradeh on /r/conlangs under the username /u/the-postminimalist, on June 4th, 2015.

Leerish is an SOV, head-final language with the use of postpositions. Its vocabulary is heavily based on Iranian languages, such as Persian, Balochi, and Avestan. Other words are entirely artificial, like yee (IPA [ˈjəɦə]; English: to be).

Inventory
The Leerish language contains one vowel /ə/, and 28 consonants. Unlike the majority of languages, Leerish contains no nasal phonemes or allophones.

Proto-Leerish
The short-lived Proto-Leerish (natively lheeri [ˈɬəːɾə̤]) had a few differences, mainly in inventory. The vowel would appear as either oral e /ə/, with the addition of a long vowel ee /əː/ (which later became a two-syllable /əɦə/), a breathy vowel i /ə̤/, and a creaky vowel a /ə̰/. In the very early stages of Proto-Leerish, the vowel was a front central /e/ instead of the mid central vowel it is now. Consonant differences would include /v/ instead of the current /β/, as well as the lack of /b/, /p͡ɸ/, /b͡β/, /t͡s/, /d͡z/, /k͡ʟ̝̊/, /ɡ͡ʟ̝/, /ɮ/, /ʝ/, /ʁ/, and /ɦ/. These letters were added to compensate for the loss of the breathy and creaky vowels.

Chart
Leerish can be written in one of two possible scripts: the Latin script, and the Leerish script. The Latin variant includes 17 letters and 11 multigraphs, each representing one unique phoneme. The Leerish script includes 14 letters, most of which can be "squished" together to act like multigraphs. __INDEX__