Vicnoran language

Vicnoran is the official language of Vicnora. It's known to be the oldest language still currently in use. It is similar to Barokian, Tudranic, Maori, Basque, and Crootch.

Phonology
The phonology of the Vicnoran language has 24 consonants and 5 vowels.

Consonants
Notes:


 * The voiced palatal nasal (IPA: [ɲ]) is actually not in the English phonology. This consonant has it's own letter in the Spanish orthography which is the letter called eñe or ñ (ny).
 * The voiced velar nasal, (IPA: [ŋ]) is pronounced as ng from the English word "ring".
 * The dental plosive consonants (IPA: [t̪] and [d̪]) are pronounced the same as the English letters t and d, but the blade of the tounge placed at the upper teeth. The dental plosive consonants are openly used in the Vicnoran language, meaning that the Vicnoran-speaking people can use the plain consonants and/or the dental consonants as the letters t and d from the orthography of the Vicnoran language.
 * The post-alveolar plosive consonants (IPA: [t͡ʃ] and [d͡ʒ]) are actually in the English phonology. t͡ʃ is pronounced as ch from the English word "check" and d͡ʒ is pronounced as j from the English word "joy".
 * The voiceless uvular plossive (IPA: [q]) is not in the English phonology. To pronounced this consonant, you need to press your uvula by your tounge as opposed to the soft palate.
 * The glottal stop (IPA: [ʔ]) is not in the English phonology nor in the English orthography, but some English words have the consonant by different types of accent. ʔ is pronounced as the sound between the vowels from the exclamation word "uh-oh"
 * The voiceless velar fricative (IPA: [x]) is pronounced as ch from the English word "loch".
 * The post-alveolar sibilant fricative consonants (IPA: [ʃ] and [ʒ]) are actually in the English phonology. ʃ is pronounced as sh from the English word "shoe" and ʒ is pronounced as s from the English word "leisure".
 * The palatal approximant (IPA: [j]) is pronounced as y from the English word "yell".

Vowels
The 5 vowels of the Vicnoran language are the basic 5-vowel system which is a common vowel system that used by most languages (including Spanish, Japanese, Swahili, Hebrew, etc.)

Orthography
The orthography of the Vicnoran language is similar to the Latin alphabet because of the amount of the letters or characters of those 2 orthographies and has an exact shape as the Latin alphabet. However, the only difference between those orthographies are the pronounciation of Vicnoran.

Digraphs & Diphtongs
There are only 4 digraphs from the Vicnoran language which are ny, ng, tc, and ch. In the Vicnoran language, there are no diphthongs from Vicnoran that pronounced as its own vowel (because of the small amount of vowels from Vicnoran), but diphthongs are allowed in the language. The pronounciation of the Vicnoran diphtongs are only a glottal stop or ʔ (allowed for all vowel, can be used optionally), the palatal approximant or j (must be used for front-to-central vowels), or the voiced labial-prevelar approximant or w (must be used for back vowels) that placed between some 2 vowels.

Examples:


 * "aa" = [aʔa]
 * "ei" = [eʔi] or [eji]
 * "ou" = [uʔo] or [uwo]

Syllable Structure
The syllable structure of the Vicnoran language is (C)(C)V(C)(C)(C) or (C3)V(C3). Position of the syllable structure:


 * The first onset (the red consonants) = s, z, ʃ
 * The second onset (the orange consonants) = m, n, p, b, t/t̪, d/d̪, t͡ʃ ,d͡ʒ, k, g, q, s, z, ʃ, ʒ, f, v, x, h
 * The third onset (the yellow consonants) = j, w, l, r
 * The nucleus (the green vowels) = a, e, i, o, u
 * The first coda (the blue consonants) = m, n, ɲ, ŋ, j, w, l, r
 * The second coda (the purple consonants) = s, z, ʃ
 * The third coda (the pink consonants) = p, b, t/t̪, d/d̪, k, g