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I. The Sounds of Adelic


a æ  b  ch  d  ð  e  f  g  h  i  j  k  l  m  n  o  ø  p  r  s  t  þ  u  v  w  y  z

The Adelic language is written in native runes, which are called the Dythonic Runes. An example can be seen on the site's background. The list above shows the Dythonic runes transliterated into Latin characters. Their sounds are explained below.

All of the vowels except æ and ø have both short and long pronunciations:

a    as u in cut, fuss when short Hear, here!
or as a in far, father when long Hear, here!

æ    always short as a in cat, sack Hear, here!

e    as e in met, less when short Hear, here!
or as a in sane, cage when long Hear, here!

i    as i in hit, kiss when short Hear, here!
or as ee in keel, steer when long Hear, here!

o    as o in dog, loss when short Hear, here!
or as o in stole, code when long Hear, here!

ø    always long as er in British hers Hear, here!

u    as oo in foot, took when short Hear, here!
or as oo in cool, mood when long Hear, here!

y    as short i with lips rounded for u Hear, here!
or long i with lips rounded for u Hear, here!

There are three diphthongs in Adelic: au, ai,and ei. Ai and ei are rare however.

au    always long as ou in out, couch Hear, here!

ai    always long as i in sight, tie Hear, here!

ei    always long as ei in reign, sleigh Hear, here!

Most of the consonants in the list are pronounced as they are in English, but a few bear explaining:

R is usually untrilled. Double -rr- is lightly trilled and tends to sound much like an English -rd-.

S should always be unvoiced, unlike in English where it becomes voiced in such words as foxes and pads.

þ is said just like the th in think and bath, while its voiced counterpart ð is said like the th in this and bathe.

J is like a blend of two English sounds. It falls somewhere between the j in jam and the z in azure or the s in vision.

Ch is said as in loch.

The consonants l, m, n, and r function in some words as sonorants; that is, they make up a pronounced syllable by themselves, without an attached vowel-sound. As English examples, we find this in words like madden and muddle.

æððl, allm, aaln, andr Hear, here!

Adelic words are almost always stressed on the first syllable.

attlisk, giiraftr, giddrjweem, aanstrauff, borrspechung Hear, here!


One exception is the unstressed intensive prefix ga- which causes the second syllable of the word to become stressed.
galauf, gaðæll, gagændling, gavooþ, gawund Hear, here!



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