Vowels The following table describes the location in the mouth where vowels are pronounced in Jad. There are no
diphthongs in Jad, but vowels frequently occur in sequence. There is no strong rule for which order the vowels must fall in when in a sequence, so many different orders are found in Jad. Vowels tend to be
nasalized when they follow a nasalized consonant, and
glottalized when they are placed before a glottal stop. A high
tone is associated with the vowel before word-final or after word-initial retroflex and dental plosives.
Consonants The phonemic status of the breathy-voiced etc. is uncertain. They are only found at the start of the word, where there is a strong tendency for voiced plosives, nasals and liquids to be aspirated. The voiced aspirates do not, in principle, contrast with the corresponding non-aspirates. D.D. Sharma notes that there appears to be dialectal variation here, and that contrasts may found that involve loanwords, but nevertheless decides to ultimately treat them as
allophones. The glottal fricative // is realised as a velar fricative // between vowels: -> 'work'. Most consonants can start a word, with the exception of and . The only consonants that can appear at the end of a word are the
liquid consonants (like and ), and the voiced plosives .
Voiced consonants are usually de-voiced when in the final position of a word or coming immediately before a voiceless sound. Unvoiced
plosives tend to be voiced when coming after a voiced sound. At the end of the word before a pause, and , and to a lesser extent other voiced consonants, tend to be
glottalised: -> . Like vowels in Jad, pronunciation of consonant sounds shifts according to the sounds surrounding the consonants.
Consonant clusters can be found in the initial and middle sections of words. At the start of the word, consonant clusters are typically of the form plosive (or fricative) + one of the semivowels : 'egg', 'poor', 'new'.
Word structure Words may be mono
morphemic or polymorphemic. Words follow the following rule set: • Words can start with any consonant but ṇ and ṛ. • Native words end in a vowel, a
plosive, a
nasal, or a
liquid consonant. • No native word begins or ends in a consonant cluster other than the exceptions mentioned above. • Normally, no aspirated consonant, breathy-voiced consonant, or
semivowel ends a native word. • Words have a small amount of pause on either side of them in a slow tempo of speech. Word composition is also limited by a set of permissible
syllables. Permitted syllables are /V/, /VC/, /CV/, /CCV/, /CVC/, /CCVC/, and /CVCC/. These syllables can be combined to make up longer words. ==Nouns==