Behold! The JJMR Mutation Table for Consonants. It also showcases the JJMR Romanization system but due to the mutations happening constantly, the romanization becomes more difficult to use.
Note: <ch> and <j> actually represents palato-alveolar affricates while <sh> and <zh> are palato-alveolar fricatives. <th> and <x> are always voiceless (sometimes <x> is /ɦ/). <r> is a tapped rhotic and <l> ranges between /ɫ/ or /l/.
The mutations occur when;
By - submittothegay
Behold! The JJMR Mutation Table for Consonants. It also showcases the JJMR Romanization system but due to the mutations happening constantly, the romanization becomes more difficult to use. Note: and actually represents palato-alveolar affricates while and are palato-alveolar fricatives. and are always voiceless (sometimes is /ɦ/). is a tapped rhotic and ranges between /ɫ/ or /l/.
The mutations occur when;
* Pachwuri particles (radicals) are bonding with regular words
* Vowels collapse and forced assimilation happens
* Consonant assimilation with the next syllable blocks or
* Determining the readings of the words through context and shift of pitch
Pipoca_com_sazom
Kriegsfisch
Estetikk
boomfruit
submittothegay
HugoSamorio
im_fine_dude
aftertheradar
jan_Jasen
ReasonablyTired
submittothegay
Ozark-the-artist
[deleted]
submittothegay
[deleted]
submittothegay
Worthy_House_3672
submittothegay
R
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That chart looks so cool
That's hard-to-follow and flavourous! When those mutations occur and is it grammatical or morphophonemic? To compare to my unreleased project i occasionly clean up and rework, consonants can mutate depending on position and other consonants fusing into one but reason for those are simply restrictive phonotactics that disallow most consonants syllable-medially and few being permitted syllable-finally and amount of consonants are small, like ~12 without allophones and those ain't even stuff like toki pona or languages found in pacific and australia plus with missing places of articulations that would be rare in world's languages EDIT: Nevermind, forgot to read comments further that you explain how it works, still this is cool!
Funkiest consonant chart I've ever seen
It looks cool, but it seems a poor way to convey this information
Yeah it's more of a visual representation of all the changes
Fantastic design man, wow
oof i am *not* smart enough to be here lmao
youre fine dude
i have no idea what this is
Omg what did you use to design this?
Adobe Illustrator
Seems like a generic flowchart app
What did you use for the design? Is it a svg app
Nope, it's Adobe Illustrator
Adobe Illustrator works with vector images though? Or does it not use .svg file format
These are all vectors, just exported as a PNG
Zheijommuri
nice try, but is a proper name that refers to the name of the people that speak the language. so it will not be lenited :D
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