2 (unrelated) pages written in my phonetic writing system for English
tû (ynrelàtd) pàjez riten in mii fönetik riitiŋ sistym fø iŋgliʃ
@lizardsquid
This is not bad at all. I'm a little confused by some of the vowels though; are you transcribing your own speech?
@DialMforMara I'm transcribing my dialect, yes
@lizardsquid
Cool!
I want to know what this sounds like (I've only really studied US and Canadian Englishes). Can you map the vowels into a vowel space?
@DialMforMara these are all the vowels, excepting the special character ŷ which represents the sounds /jʉ:/ (as in the start of "union")
@lizardsquid @DialMforMara for context on the examples, this is the Australian pronunciation of all those words, right?
@Felthry @DialMforMara yes, the examples words are all australian pronounciation - there's no way for me to map australian vowels onto US pronunciation at all
@lizardsquid @DialMforMara yeah I figured
@DialMforMara I should note:
some of the words on these pages are written with the standard english spelling, instead of mine
and some of the words I may have used the wrong vowels
also: I don't write the ə if it's the only vowel in the last syllable of the word, so "nation" is written as "nàʃn" instead of "nàʃyn"
@lizardsquid Voynich Manuscript, c.a. 2018.
(there are a couple of other shorthands used in the pages, because these are lecture notes, but should give you a good impression)
(ðer r a kypl o yþy ʃøthands ŷzd in ð pàjez, bìkoz ðìz r lekcy nöts, būt ʃūd giv ŷ a gûd impreʃn)