The Mohican Alphabet: Vowels

Conventions

Long Vowels

The sound of these is stretched out, elongated, they take more time to say. They are spelled with doubled vowels to indicate how long it takes to say them. There are four long vowels:

⟨aa⟩ English ‘nod’, ‘broad’

maamaakis
waak

⟨ãa⟩ English ‘long’, ‘owned’, ‘wood’. The airflow is nasal, breathing out through the nose instead of the mouth.

mãamãach
wãak

⟨ee⟩ English ‘made’, ‘reed’, ‘skid’

eene
weeke

⟨oo⟩ English ‘road’, ‘food’

ooxoothoon
pnook

There is some variety in the ways different speakers might say a vowel sound, especially to ears used to hearing English. Mohican allows for such diversity, they are all correct. The English examples are somewhat close to Mohican, and assume an early twenty-first century mid-Wisconsin accent. Make sure to elongate the vowel’s time; these are not the same as what are called long vowels in English.

Short Vowels

These sounds are spoken quickly and in some cases can be so fast as to be whispered or deleted altogether. There are three short vowels; they are written once to indicate the amount of time it takes to say them:

⟨a⟩ English ‘lock’, ‘luck’

awan
nak

⟨i⟩: English ‘mitt’, ʻitem’,ʻadjust’

pkinim
nik

⟨o⟩: English ‘push’, ‘wool’

thpomok
onit

Various speakers may the short vowels somewhat differently, and their sounds are often affected by the consonants that surround them. The English descriptions below are at best approximations. For some speakers, ⟨o⟩ can sound like /w/ (especially at the beginning of a word or after a /k/). This is normal variation and both pronunciations are correct.

Vowel Comparisons

Listen to the following, and pay attention to the difference in vowel length.

awan
awaan
mawe
maawe
neexin
neexeen
nin
neen
otayoomow
ootayoomeen
nok
nook

Cut Vowels

The length of vowels is almost always cut down or compressed at the end of a word or before a glottal stop. Speakers may also cut a vowel before a /w/ or /y/ at the end of a word. In the dictionary, cut long vowels are indicated with an accent: /â/ from /aa/, /ê/ from /ee/, /ô/ from /oo/. Cut short vowels are written without the accent in the dictionary. In normal writing, cut long vowels are not pointed out with an accent mark as they are pronounced the same as their cut short-vowel counterparts.

Cut-a from /aa/ and /a/ are pronounced the same and are spelled ⟨a⟩.

pna’
cut from short /pna’/
ma’
cut from long /maa’/
ãanaw
cut from short /ãanaw/
neemanaw
cut from long /neemanaaw/

Cut /ãa/ is spelled ⟨ã⟩.

chkwã’kat
cut from long /chkwãa’kat/
maxaanmãw
cut from long /maxaanmãaw/

Cut /ee/ and /i/ are pronounced the same and are spelled ⟨e⟩.

kãatne’
cut from short /kãatni’/
nimthe’
cut from long /nimthee’/
key
cut from short /kiy/
panew
cut from long /paneew/

Cut /o/ and /oo/ are pronounced the same and are spelled ⟨o⟩.

o’keeskw
cut from short /o’keeskw/
mo’che
cut from long /moo’che/
pmithow
cut from short /pmithow/
manitow
cut from long /manitoow/

Marginal /ae/

The sound ⟨ae⟩ occurs very rarely and only in certain circumstances. It sounds like English ‘bat’ or ‘get’.

haengst
maelaeks
chae’th