Consonants The phonemic inventory of the consonants is written by using the orthography used by Kopris in his analysis, which was based on Barbeau's transcriptions. The orthographic symbol is written in angled brackets where it differs from the IPA. Kopris listed places of articulation for the consonants but noted that the distinction had not been made by Barbeau. is placed in parentheses because it appears as an
allophone of in nearly all cases, but that cannot always explain its presence. The presence of a single voiced
stop, , contrasting with the voiceless stop , makes Wyandot unusual among Iroquoian languages, as it is the only one with a phonemic
voicing distinction. The sound is pronounced as rather than , according to researchers who phonetically transcribed directly from fluent speakers and described it as "corresponding to the English
r" and as "the smooth English sound, never vibrant." The Wyandot and are both cognate with in other Northern Iroquoian languages. Although the two largely appear to be in
free variation, they clearly contrast in some cases (as in the
minimal pairs and ). The ambiguity of the relationship between and seems to indicate that the two are in the process of a phonemic split that was not yet complete by the early 20th century. Another unique feature of Wyandot is the presence of the voiced
fricative , creating an - contrast, but there is no corresponding - contrast. The
phoneme also has no voiced counterpart. Consonants may appear in
clusters. Word-initial consonant clusters can be up to three consonants long, medial clusters up to four consonants long, and final clusters up to two consonants long.
Vowels Barbeau's original transcriptions contained great detail and a complex system of diacritics, resulting in 64 different vowel characters. By eliminating allophones, Kopris found six phonemes, in addition to the marginal phoneme . Other analysis of the same Barbeau data suggests that vowel length is contrastive in Wyandot, like in other Iroquoian languages.
Phonototactics A Wyandot syllable consists of a vowel as the nucleus, a coda, and an optional onset. Onset clusters of two consonants are possible, with a single triconsonantal cluster () occurring only in the first syllable of a word. Codas may consist of up to two consonants. This gives a maximal Wyandot syllable structure of CCCVCC, where C represent a consonant, and V represents a vowel. ==Orthography==