Originally posted by floridaminnie
There are two special letters in Arovën, w and y, which are intermediate between vowels and consonants, which may, on a few simple conditions, be used as either. They are classed as consonants, as that is how they are most generally used, but in syntactic words and sub-root (but never root) words they function as "minimalistic" vowels, the y as a degenerate i and the w as a degenerate u. That is to say, when they appear between two consonants (or before a consonant at the beginning of a word) they are pronounced with as little individual identity as vowels as possible, connecting consonants more or less directly. For instance, the feminine subroot ~yn is pronounced more or less as a pure "nn" sound, but with a "high" vowel character to it, rather than the "low" character of *wn (imagine saying "in" and the "un" of "under" and reduce these syllables to pure consonant "n"s -- the slight but noticeable difference between them is the difference between an yn and an wn. In fact the two are exclusive so thay can't be confused -- wn in particular is not a sound that actually appears in Arovën, and neither does yr as this sound has been modified to wr). That's all you really need to know as far as pronunciation goes (there are some details about the d which you need to know for flawless pronunciation, but we won't be that picky yet!); the rest of this page goes on about word construction, which you don't need to know about to speak Danovën; only read it if it happens to interest you.