Future Spanish [FUP]
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Future Spanish
Español [espɑɲol]*
Español [espɑɲol]*
Registered by
[Deactivated User] on 27 January 2023
Language type
Not specified
Species
Human/humanoid
About Future Spanish
Future Spanish is Spanish language spoken approx. 500 years from now (in 26th century). It differs from current Spanish in following ways:
Phonology
- /h/ is pronounced rather than silent.
- /j/ is pronounced [ʒ] rather than [x]
- /x/ is pronounced [ʃ] rather than [ks]
- The five vowels are still same, but have now length distinction
- Many more consonants, such as /ll/, /ñ/ and /ch/ are permitted in coda.
- Stress is always on penultimate syllable.
Grammar
- There are six cases, rather than only one: nominative, genitive, accusative, dative, ablative and vocative.
- There are possessive suffixes.
- Composed forms of movement verbs, such as ir and venir are formed using the auxiliary verb ser, instead of haber.
- Possession is expressed with haber instead of tener.
- In composed forms, past participle agrees with gender and number of object.
- Future subjunctive is much more common in use.
Orthography
[kwa, kwo, kwu] are spelled /qua, quo, quu/ instead of /cua, cuo, cuu/.
[kwe, kwi] are spelled /qüe, qüi/ instead of /cue, cui/.
Phonology
- /h/ is pronounced rather than silent.
- /j/ is pronounced [ʒ] rather than [x]
- /x/ is pronounced [ʃ] rather than [ks]
- The five vowels are still same, but have now length distinction
- Many more consonants, such as /ll/, /ñ/ and /ch/ are permitted in coda.
- Stress is always on penultimate syllable.
Grammar
- There are six cases, rather than only one: nominative, genitive, accusative, dative, ablative and vocative.
- There are possessive suffixes.
- Composed forms of movement verbs, such as ir and venir are formed using the auxiliary verb ser, instead of haber.
- Possession is expressed with haber instead of tener.
- In composed forms, past participle agrees with gender and number of object.
- Future subjunctive is much more common in use.
Orthography
[kwa, kwo, kwu] are spelled /qua, quo, quu/ instead of /cua, cuo, cuu/.
[kwe, kwi] are spelled /qüe, qüi/ instead of /cue, cui/.
Sample of Future SpanishCan't find any yet.
Phonology
Consonants | Bilabial | Labio- dental | Alveolar | Post- Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||||||
Nasal | m | n | ɲ | |||||||||||
Plosive | p | b | t | d | k | g | ||||||||
Fricative | f | v | s | z | ʃ | ʒ | h | |||||||
Affricate | t͡ʃ | |||||||||||||
Lateral approximant | l | ʎ | ||||||||||||
Approximant | j | |||||||||||||
Trill | r | |||||||||||||
Flap | ɾ |
Blends | kw |
Vowels | Front | Back | ||
Close | i i: | u u: | ||
Close-mid | e e: | o o: | ||
Open | ɑ ɑ: |
Orthography
Below is the orthography for Future Spanish. This includes all graphemes as defined in the language's phonology settings - excluding the non-distinct graphemes/polygraphs.
Future SpanishOrthography [edit] | ||||||||||
Aa/ɑ/ | Áá/ɑ:/ | Bb/b/ | Cc/k/ | CH ch/t͡ʃ/ | Dd/d/ | Ee/e/ | Éé/e:/ | Ff/f/ | Gg/g/ | Hh/h/ |
Ii/i/ | Íí/i:/ | Jj/ʒ/ | Ll/l/ | LL ll/ʎ/ | Mm/m/ | Nn/n/ | Ññ/ɲ/ | Oo/o/ | Óó/o:/ | Pp/p/ |
Rr/ɾ/ | RR rr/r/ | Ss/s/ | Tt/t/ | Uu/u/ | Úú/u:/ | Vv/v/ | Xx/ʃ/ | Yy/j/ | Zz/z/ | |
✔ Shown in correct order [change] |