Buthrotan

Phonology
The Buthrotan language has a relatively european-sounding phonology, comprised of six basic vowel sounds and twenty-six different consonant sounds (although some other consonants appear in allophonic positions), and many regular consonants also appear as allophones of others.

Vowels
As said previously, Buthrotan has six vowels - ones that are often found in typical European languages.

The Buthrotan vowel system is unusal as it contains no basic vowel /a/, instead it contains the open back vowel /ɑ/ (like the pronounciation of English "ah!") and the near-open front vowel /æ/ (like the pronunciation of English "cat"). In word-final position, all non-close vowels /ɛ/, /æ/, /ɑ/ and /ɒ/ become a reduced central schwa sound [ə], so the word "burovo" sounds as if it is written "burova". In contrast, the close vowels /i/, /y/ and /u/ all become their longer counterparts /iː/, /yː/ and /uː/.

Buthrotan does not employ any aspect of vowel harmony or distinguishing vowel length, although vowel length can be allophonic (as mentioned above). In stressed syllables, vowels usually become allophonically lengthened in speech, although this is neither crucial nor phonemic.

Buthrotan has no dipthongs. It historically did have one /oʊ/ (like "oh!" in some dialects of English), but this later merged with /u/ (although it is still orthographically represented by the letter "ou").

Consonants
Where symbols for consonants appear in pairs, the one to the left represents a voiceless consonant, whereas the one on the right represents a voiced consonant. The consonant /h/ can become the glide [j] or [w] when found in an intervocalic position. So for example lhuha is pronounced [ɮuwə].

Consonant Clusters
Buthrotan permits several consonant clusters, although many of the ones containing alveolar consonants have been simplified (see the section postalveolar assimilation). The majority of them are voiceless, and as such are easily pronounced by native english speakers. There are however some that are unusual, such as [pt] (represented by "bt"), for example btahs "god" and [ɮt] (represented by "lht"), for example lhtu "cup", whose word-initial locations can be difficult for speakers of English.

H-Dropping
The consonant /h/ is dropped in many cases. It becomes the glides [j] and [w] between vowels, or is deleted altogether. For example, slrohoumb becomes pronounced as [ʃɹo.umb] - as if it was spelt šroümb.

Postalveolar Assimilation
Both alveolar and palatal consonants become postalvelar (like the sounds in "cheese", "shop" and "judge") through reaction with other postalveolar consonants and the r sound.

The languages only rhotic consonant /ɾ/ becomes the alveolar approximant [ɹ] (the "r" sound in English) in consonant clusters. In consonant clusters involving alveolar consonants (tr, dr, str, cr, sr, slr, slhr, sfr, svr, sqhr and zr), this sound has the effect of postalveolarising the entire consonant cluster, as seen in the table below.

The palatal plosive /c/ (represented by the letter "q"), and the palatal fricative /ç/ (represented by the letter ) also assimilate into postalveolar consonants if followed by the rhotic [ɹ].

Finally, you seldom ever find /s/, /z/ and /ts/ in the same word as /ʃ/ and /ʒ/, /tʃ/ and /dʒ/. In a word, they either all alveolar or all postalveolar. In most words this is indicated, for example in words such as ševešešum "you're welcome" (from historical ševesesum), however, in some words it is simply a matter of memory, such as sqhrucela "flower" (pronounced [ʃɹutʃɛlə]), where the "c" is pronounced as "č", because of assimilation with the cluster "sqhr" which represents the same sound as "š".

Final Vowel Reduction
All non-close vowels (i.e. a, ah, e and o) become severely reduced to [ə] at the end of a word. This means that the words mura, murah, mure and muro would all be pronounced as [muɾə] - the only way of distinguishing between them would be via orthography.

Final Vowel Lengthening
All close vowels (i, y and u) experience lengthening when placed at the end of a word. So the pronunciation of mny ("what?") is [mnyː]. When a word root ending in -i, -u and -y has a suffix attatched to the end of it, the vowel is shortened (as it is no longer in word-final position), for example ntosi [n.tɒsiː] "four" into ntosisqh [n.tɒsiç] "quarter".

Orthography
Buthrotan Orthography is easier for the reader than the writer, as many letters and letter sequences represent the same sound, whereas very few letter sequences represent more than one sound.

Alphabet
The Buthrotan Alphabet consists of numerous letters. It contains all the basic letters of the latin alphabet (although "w" is only seen in foreign words), as well as several digraphs and the letters 'č' and 'š' and 'ž'. All of these are treated as letters of their own, and are collated as such in dictionaries.

Diacritics
The three letters with a caron ('č', 'š' and ž) are treated undisputedly as letters of their own, as they represent consonantal sounds quite different from their corresponding non-caron letters. They have their own place in collation order, and their own section in dictionaries etc. However, Buthrotan also uses a number of other diacritics to aid in pronunciation and etymology of the language's words. These letters with diacritics are not treated as letters in their own right, rather as modifications of their parent letters.
 * The Grave Accent is used on the letters a and e to diffrentiate between words that would otherwise be spelt the same. For example between ne (masculine definate article) and nè (not, no). For example "nè, ne spestror a nè ne quthourspou" ("no, the plates are not on the countertop").
 * The Circumflex is used on all the vowel letters to show abbreviation and contraction of words. Buthrotan is a very heavily contracting and abbreviating language even in formal writing, and a circumflex indicates a lost sound or even a lost word ending. For example the word samphrimoun ("friend (of unspecified gender)") is often shortened to sampî, and the masculine and feminine equivalents shortened to sampê and sampâ respectively. The word fegunalor "people" is often shortened to fôr etc. See the section on abbreviation and contraction for much more in-depth information.
 * Lastly, the Diaeresis is seen on the letter u to show that a cluster 'ou' is pronounced as a sequence of 'o' followed by a 'u', rather than /u/ as the letter ou represents. For example koüm "horse".