The Mohican Alphabet: Consonants

Conventions

Basic Consonants

⟨b⟩ English ‘tumble’. This almost always follows /m/.

mbey
hambat

⟨ch⟩ English ‘mischief’. May sometimes sound like /j/ ‘major’ to English speakers.

cha'kwtãan
kaache
kaakwaach

⟨d⟩ English ‘mending’. This almost always follows /n/ or /m/.

ndawat
kooseendam

⟨g⟩ English ‘finger’. This almost always follows /n/.

ngomaawe
peengith

⟨j⟩ English ‘conjure’. This almost always follows /n/.

njakseese
peenjathow

⟨h⟩ English ‘hat’. This only occurs at the beginning of words or after consonants.

hooth
eenhã

⟨k⟩ English ‘skill’. At the end of a word there is an audible exhale, but otherwise there is no strong outflow of breath after (no aspiration). May sometimes sound like /g/ ‘dragon’ to English speakers.

kãasa
mdanookana
a'taak

⟨l⟩ English ‘hello’. This sound is very rare in Mohican.

choochiloos

⟨m⟩ English ‘mouse’.

maak
onãamaw
taweekwam

⟨n⟩ English ‘no’.

ne'aw
kinaawe
matathin

⟨p⟩ English ‘sponge’. At the end of a word there is an audible exhale, but otherwise there is no strong outflow of breath after (no aspiration). May sometimes sound like /b/ ‘able’ to English speakers.

pa'ãaka
weepawaayow
otop

⟨s⟩ English ‘saw’. This may be pronounced by some sepakers with the tongue-tip a little further back along the roof of the mouth than it is in English, sounding close to English ‘ship’

sãapeewe
chkeeweese
wãapã'tkwaas

⟨t⟩ English ‘stop’. At the end of a word there is an audible exhale, but otherwise there is no strong outflow of breath after (no aspiration). May sometimes sound like /d/ ‘middle’ to English speakers.

tãaka
aakhootaw
onit

⟨th⟩ English ‘thing’. This may be pronounced by some sepakers as a somewhat lisped s-sound closer to the teeth than English s.

thooknãan
ãathaapow
che'nith

⟨w⟩ English ‘away’. After a vowel letter, the /w/ sound is always pronounced distinctly.

waawe'taw
awaan
ãamew

⟨x⟩ Scottish ‘loch’, German ‘Bach’. This is a raspy k-like sound and should be pronounced with joy and gusto.

xamaw
meexathkw
keesoox

⟨y⟩ English ‘yep’. After a vowel letter, the /y/ sound is always pronounced distinctly.

yathkam
tooyaakw
peenay

⟨'⟩ English ‘uh-oh’. Called a glottal stop, this sounds like quickly holding your breath between sounds. This only occurs at the ends of words or after vowels.

ndawa'a
meene'

There is some variety in the ways different speakers might say a consonant 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 pronounce each consonant clearly and distinctly.

Complex Consonants

Mohican can join consonants in ways that might be unfamiliar to English speakers. Here are a few noteworthy combinations.

⟨gw⟩ English ‘language’. This almost always follows /n/.

ngwota
ãayãangwat

⟨kw⟩ English ‘squeek’. At the end of words, the /w/ sound is whispered

kwã
nãambaakwa
aakwothkw

⟨kh⟩: English ‘coat’. This sound has a strong outflow of air afterwards: it is aspirated.

cheekheekan

⟨ph⟩: English ‘post’. This sound has a strong outflow of air afterwards: it is aspirated.

nãapham

⟨t-h⟩: English ‘tall’. This sound has a strong outflow of air afterwards: it is aspirated. The hyphen distinguishes this combination from the sound written ⟨th⟩.

t-ha
weet-haatam

Doubled Consonants

Where a consonant is doubled, written twice in a row, it is held twice as long.

othkeennow
kakaxkkãata'aw