User:Robbiemuffin/Kreyol/Chapter 1/Orthography
Chapter 1 | Prep work |
Chapter 2 | First weeks |
Chapter 3 | Beginning Kreyol, part 1 |
Chapter 4 | Beginning Kreyol, part 2 |
Chapter 5 | Intermediate Kreyol |
Chapter 6 | Advanced Kreyol readings |
Appendices | Tables, links, and other resources |
Kreyòl was predominantly an oral tradition long before there were any official recognition of the language as a whole, or a common writing system. This shows through in the orthography of the language, from the presentation of the alphabet to the more-or-less literal representation of sounds by their letters. Kreyòl is a fairly new language, and that along with its strong tendency to be "written as it sounds", leads to a fairly fluid language: ie, the spelling of words can be suggestive of the authors accent and may not lead to a match in a dictionary for what is really a common word.
Graphemes
editA | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z |
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a | b | c | d | e | f | g | h | i | j | k | l | m | n | o | p | r | s | t | u | v | w | y | z |
Kreyol uses a set of latin characters to write its letters. It is important to note that the graphemes are not the alphabet of the language: there is a large number of digraphs and some of the graphemes only occur in digraphs (for example, h is never capitalized, as it only occurs in the letter Ch).
Diacritics
editGrave accent
editThe grave accent is not really a diacritic, as it differentiates completely different vowels (e and è, for example). It is included for completeness.
Acute accent
editThe acute accent --probably denotes syllabic stress.
Double dot
editThe diaeresis (trema)
Circumflex
editThe circumflex is used to show a long vowel.
Punctuation
editApostrophe
editApostrophes are used between a verb and a pronoun in its short form (as a direct object): l'ale, l'gen (he/she has), but not after l in yo wè l (they saw him/her).
Hyphen
editHyphens are used to avoid ambiguity with nouns seperated from their determiners. bagay-la (the thing), is fine but unnecessary, while poul-nan kakaye (the hen is crowing) is better than poul nan kakaye (the hens in the process of crowing).
Alphabet
editEach letter in the alphabet tends to have a one-to-one corrospondence with its sound. Like some other langauges (eg, Hindi), the alphabet is not presented as a single line of symbols for memorization, but rather it is divided analyitcally into consonants, vowels, semivowels (vowel-consonants), and nasal vowels.
Consonants
editThe pure consonants (Konsòn) and semivowels (Vwayèl-konsòn) taken as a whole are treated together as consonants.
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Vowels
editThe pure vowels (Vwayèl bouch) and nasal vowels (Vwayèl bouch-nen) are taken together as the vowels.
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- despite the fact that /un/ combines two sounds, it is counted as a single letter. There is some support for considering oun as a nasal U (close back rounded vowel) sound, /ũ/, but this appears to be a minority view.
Select readings | general information on Kreyol, its phonetics, and Haitian culture |
Orthography | the written language |
Phonetics | spoken Kreyol |