Neirani

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Revision as of 17:35, 23 August 2025 by Evie (talk | contribs) (s/p/t in table)
The words 'koıtıeq', 'saıram', 'loefeı', and 'dıaobıao' written with Neirani diphthongs.

Neirani is a variant of the Derani script in which falling diphthongs are written as single letters, rather than using the diphthong mark (◌󱛎◌). This makes the writing system more compact and light on diacritics.

Official Neirani
󱚺󱛎󱚹 () 󱚶 (aı/d)
󱚺󱛎󱛃 (ao) 󱚷 (ao/t)
󱚴󱛎󱚹 () 󱚸 (eı/z)
󱛃󱛎󱚹 () 󱚽 (oı/nh)

As with the vowel letters 󱚺, 󱚲, 󱚹, 󱛃, 󱚴, these letters may stand for either a consonant or a diphthong depending on their position within a word.

The origins of Neirani

It's imagined that the letters 󱚶, 󱚷, 󱚸, and 󱚽 were originally formed by joining the vowel letters of each diphthong into more complex shapes that could still be written in a single stroke. 󱚲 (u) came to be used for the 'o' in 'ao' and 'oı' because of its simpler shape. 󱚷 (ao) was assigned a wider glyph than the other diphthongs because Toaq phonology allows it to be pronounced as two syllables when stressed ([aː.o]).

Hoemaı called this "probably not a bad idea" so maybe we should start using it![1]