A/N: It's MY language if you want to use it ask.

Llanoran Translation Rule

Names NEVER translate

Pronunciation Rules

Consonants ARE pronounced unless they're followed by y or a vowel.

Ai is pronounced as a long i.

The English counterparts of Llanoran o, z, p, n, u, d, y, s and c CAN repeat giving them two sounds: oh/ooh for o, zuh/zuh-ku for z, puh/puh-su for p, noh/noh-ki for n, uh/ew for u, duh/duh-ea for d, ai/ai-ey for y, soh/soh-mi for s and cai/cai-ya for c.

The Llanoran c is ALWAYS pronounced hard.

Ey, ea and i are ALWAYS pronounced ee (including sounds).

If two similar sounds are next to each other (ai-ey and i) the second one is dropped.

If two "uh" sounds are together or only have one letter separating them, they're either:

a. combined like normal (if the u is second) or

b. combined with the FIRST letter of the second sound dropped (if something else [t] is second) to form the "uhuh" sound.

Translation/Pronunciation Guide

a= m (muh) b= w (wuh) c= e (ih/ea)
d= t (tuh) e= o (oh/ooh) f= z (zuh/zuh-ku)
g= p (puh/puh-su) h= k (kuh) i= v (vuh)
j= x (xaw) k= g (guh) l= n (noh/noh-ki)
m= s (soh/soh-mi) n= a (ah/ay) o= u (uh/ew)
p= d (duh/duh-ea) q= f (fuh) r= b (buh)
s= y (ai/ai-ey) t= j (juh) u= h (huh)
v= r (ruh) w= l (luh) x= q (ku)
y= i (ee) z= c (cai/cai-ya)