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"

a mora is a single V or a C together with a V. the final consonant of a syllable is seen as a whole mora on its own. a combination of a C, M and V is considered 2 moræ long. (V= vowel, C= consonant and M= medial)

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.