Phase 3: Vowel Reformation
Step 5: Rebulid the vowel system.
This is perhaps the most complex part, because the English vowel system is barely even a system.
Rules we can state about English vowels:
Magic E on vowels or Split E.
All of the 6 vowels (yes, including y) are modified by the letter E when the E appears 1, 2 or 3 letters after it, as long as the vowel is not modified by another letter (R, W, L).
o → toe
rot → rote
hang → change
This is extremely prevalent throughout the orthography, and is a defining feature of English.
The rule is also broken in a fair majority of basic vocabulary.
done love dove above
move
have badge
wedge
there, where,
Magic E on consonants
C and G — "Assimilation"
Assimilation is caused by the positions of two phonemes being very close in the mouth, then merging accidentally. This can become entrenched within a language's orthography, which happened in English in the past but modern English allows both assimilated and unassimilated sounds. Thus, ge is /ɡ/ in "get" but /ʤ/ in "general".
Assimilation in English typically occurs between palatal consonants and palatal vowels.
CE CI CY GE GI GY
Mainly applies to C and G, changing C from /k/ into /s/ and G from /ɡ/ into /ʤ/.
The rule with C is 100% consistent, except for a few Celtic & Gallic words.
Celtic /kɛɫ.tɪk/ → C̊éltic
The rule with G is broken basically all the time, especially in fundamental vocabulary and in many spelling codas like bag→bagged, rug→rugged, etc. — but these have double G.
get, give, git, gild,
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