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| Chekt
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ccs2charts.html Any consistent phonemic notation can be fully described with a phoneme-grapheme correspondence table. This is one of the advantages of an alphabetic or phonemic orthography. To go from symbol to sound or from sound to symbol, all one needs is a simple look-up table similar to the ones shown here. There is more than one way to build a correspondence table. For the vowels, the most insightful table is a 4 column table with 6 checked vowels, 6 free vowels (extended), 6 combined vowels, and 6 combinations with r (or schwa). A consonant table should align the voiced (lenis) and unvoiced (fortis) consonant pairs. Since there are 8 of these, the most useful array is an 8x3 table. This becomes an 8x6 table when the vowels are included. Both the 4x6 vowel listing and the 6x8 phoneme table are displayed on this page. Each
cell in the 4x6 table below corresponds to a phoneme in English speech.
The first two columns list the 12 pure (or uncombined) phonemes.
The white cells mark phonemes that are so nearly alike that they can be
merged as in Unigraf.
The third and fourth columns list important diphthongs or blends of two
or more pure phonemes. The gray cells indicate phoneme combinations
that neither Henry Sweet nor Daniel Jones considered to be important enough
to list as separate phonemes. Their rationale for not listing three
sound combinations (triphthongs) can be found in the newsletter article
on the
minimum
phoneme inventory.
CKS is probably similar to any notation that uses IPA as a starting point. Those familiar with Harry Lindgren's Fonetic A notation will see a similarity between it and CKS. Lindgren used the apostrophe for an extender mark as well as schwa. Many people found this double use a little confusing. In CKS, the shwapostrofi always references a lax central vowel and is found in u' a' and o' [aw+uh]. In TO, both [i] and [y] can refer to /i:/ [ee]. /ai/ or [a'i] can therefore be written as ai or ay. This in turn can be shortened to 'i or 'y or the combination 'iy. The only reason to alter
the IPA sound sign [ai] is to achieve a closer approximation of TO. CKS
looks more like English. Compared to /ou/ for the vowel in oat, [ai] has
few conflicts.
What is a checked (chekt) vowel? In CKS chekt vowels are written with an after-dot. In English (TO), checked vowels are often marked with a double consonant. setting, written, check, egg. Any vowel that cannot occur at the end of a word is referred to as a chekt vowel. Chekt vowels are always followed by a consonant. Do the chekt vowels always have to be marked or can the dots be clipt? In English they are often clipped and the same practice can be followed in CKS. They are marked in ambiguous situations and these are rare among the most common words. is and ease are written the same way in CKS. "Iz hi teiking it izi aftr hiz ilnes?" Most languages live with a long - short vowel ambiguity.
|
| checked
short |
extended
long |
r-comb.
in RP r=shwa |
voiced
lenis |
unvoiced
fortis |
syllabic | |
| a. *ax | a [aa] *alms | ar *are, car | b *boot but | p *pipe pyp | l. .l *li.tl | |
| e. *elbow e.lbo | e [ei] *ace eis | er *air, there | j *gym - jim | c [ch] *church | r. .r *ro'r | |
| i. *itch i.ch | i [ee] *eel il | ir *ear, irate | d *did | t *tip | m. .m *mu'm | |
| o. *ox, odd | o [aw] *awe | or *order | x [ð] *the x | + [th] *thin | n. .n *nu'n | |
| u. *hook hu.k | u [oo] iu *zulu | ur iur *tour | v *visa - visa' | f *fife - fif | 3 [ng] *sing | |
| u' *up, hut | a' [shwa] a'go | .r *her, *'rk | k *kit cat ka.t | g *get | h *who hu | |
| o' *owe Ø | au [.w] *out | aur *our | z *zip | s *sip | w & [hw] | |
| oi *oil | 'iy [ai] *ice | 'iyr *ire | 2 [zh] leisure li2ur | 5 [sh]ip 5ip | y *year yir | |
| 24 Vowels - 21
essential
12 unmixed "pure" vowels |
24 Consonants
22 unmixed non-blends |
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