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KEY TO THE PHONETIC SYSTEM EMPLOYED

For this electronic edition, Hoijer's original 1938 orthography has been converted the new 'practical orthography' which is used for writing many of the Apachean languages today.

Click the thumbnail for a full-size image of the Hoijer's 1938 orthography.



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The contemporary practical orthography involves small changes to roman alphabet characters, or combinations of these characters to represent the phonemes of the Apache language.

For those interested a more detailed comparison between Hoijer's orthography and the one employed here-- go to: Introduction to the Electronic Edition, under the subheading "Orthography and Apache Phonemics"(under construction)

Vowels

               
as in German mann 
aa  as in English father 
as in English bet 
ee  as in English bed 
varies from the sound of English bid to that of English beat 
as in English bead 
varies from the sound of German so to that of English boot. 
oo  varies from the sound of German Sohn to that of English sooth. 

Vowel length, short or long, is phonetic in the Apachean languages. Short vowels are written as single letters, long vowels are written as double letters

Vowels are also distinguished phonemically by nasalization. Nasalization is indicated by a subscript hook: aͅ, eͅ, iͅ, oͅ.

Both Chiricahua and Mescalero Apache employ pitch accent as a syllable phoneme. The pitch of the syllable is carried by its vowel or by a syllabic n. Two pitch registers are distinguished together with two inflected tones. These are indicated as follows: an acute accent: á, é, í, ó, denotes the high tone, no accent mark on a vowel indicates the low tone. In syllables with long vowels an acute accented onset letter followed by its unaccented double indicates the falling tone: áa, ée, íi, óo, and an unaccented onset vowel followed by its accute accented double indicates the rising tone: aá, eé, ií, oó.

Consonants

                                                         
intermediate unaspirated bilabial stop 
voiced bilabial nasal continuant. In one word, ~ma'ye~ 'coyote', this is pronounced as a combination of m and b. 
unvoiced aspirated alveolar stop. The aspiration is velar before the vowels a and o, and front palatal before the vowels a and i  
intermediate unaspirated alveolar stop 
t'  glottalized alveolar stop 
voided alveolar nasal continuant 
n prenasalized n, pronounced as a combination of n and d. In Chiricahua:, the n-sound is predominant but in Mescalero the two sounds have approximately equal value  
unvoiced alveolar sibilant. When this sound occurs in a prefix to a stem containing the phonemes sh, zh, j, ch, or ch', it assimilates to sh 
voiced alveolar sibilant 
dz  intermediate unaspirated alveolar affricative.  
ts  unvoiced aspirated alveolar affricative. The aspiration tends to be velar before a and o and front palatal before a and i. In many cases, however, the aspiration is no heavier than that of German Zeit. 
ts'  glottalized alveolar affricative 
ł  voiceless spirantal alveolar lateral roughly similar to the ll of Welsh 
voiced alveolar lateral. In the final position, it takes on syllabic quality  
dl  intermediate lateral affricative 
tł  voiceless lateral affricative 
tł'  glottalized lateral affricative 
voiced front palatal spirant. roughly as in English young 
sh  unvoiced blade alveolar spirant. When it occurs in a prefix to a stem containing the phonemes s, z, dz, ts, or ts', it assimilates to s 
zh  voiced blade alveolar spirant 
intermediate unaspirated blade alveolar affricative. When it occurs in a prefix to a stem containing the phonemes s, z, dz, ts, or ts', it assimilates to dz 
ch  unvoiced aspirated blade alveolar affricative. The aspiration varies in quality as in the case of ts, q.v. 
ch'  glottalized blade alveolar affricative 
unvoiced aspirated back palatal stop. Before the vowels a and o, the aspiration is velar and before e and i, it is front palatal. 
intermediate unaspirated palatal stop. Before the vowels a and o, it is back palatal and before a and i, it is front palatal. 
k'  glottalized back palatal stop 
unvoiced spirant. Before the vowels a and o, it is back palatal and before e and i, it is front palatal. Also expressed as faucal spirant--as in English home 
gh  voiced palatal spirant. Before a it is back palatal, before o, back palatal and labial- ized, and before e and i, front palatal. 
the glottal stop 

If an unvoiced spirant, which is otherwise written as 'h', occurs after 's', 'ts', or 'z', it is written as 'x' to avoid confusing its order in the consonant sequence with single consonant phonemes which are expressed by letter combinations ending with 'h'.