Softening of Consonants
When certain consonants (k, c, t, p, g, s) are surrounded by single prime vowels, (a, i, u) they are pronounced more softly, often sounding like letters that do not even appear in the Alutiiq alphabet! This can cause confusion, but luckily the sound changes follow a recognizable pattern.
A prime vowel in Alutiiq is a,i, or u. The sound of one of the following consonants will change only if has a single prime vowel (a,i, or u) both before and after. If a doubled vowel (aa, ii, uu) or diphthong (ai, au, ia, iu, ua, ui) appears on either side of the consonant, the consonant’s sound will not change.
K: When a k occurs between two prime vowels, it sounds more like an English g.
-
akitmoney
C: If c is surrounded by two single prime vowels, it produces more of an English j sound
-
macaqsun
T: When a single prime vowel occurs both before and after a t, it sounds like a d.
-
qatayaqseagull
P: If p is surrounded by two single prime vowels, it sounds like an English b.
-
napaqtree; pole
G: An Alutiiq g occurring between two single prime vowels makes a soft gh sound halfway between an h and a hard Englishg (the normal Alutiiq g sounds more like an English h).
-
agigo
S: Depending on the speaker, an s between two single prime vowels will make a z or zh sound.
-
isumaqraisin
-
isuwiqseal
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Language Lessons
- Alutiiq – What is in a Name?
- Alutiiq and other Alaskan Languages
- Origins of the Alutiiq Alphabet
- Dialects and Styles of Alutiiq
- Language Loss & Revitalization
- Alutiiq Orthography
- Aapit – Alphabet
- Vowels
- Doubled Vowels & Diphthongs
- Consonants
- Stop Consonants
- Fricative Consonants
- Nasal Consonants
- Softening of Consonants
- Alutiiq Grammar: An Overview
- Pluralization
- Working with Noun Stems
- Working with Verb Stems
- Suffixes and Other Word Endings
- Postbases and Joining
- Alutiiq in Correspondence
- Kodiak Alutiiq Place Names
- Alutiiq Numbers