Etrancoasti dialects

The Etrancoasti language has two major dialects: the Northern Dialect and Southern Dialect. The difference is mainly pronounciation, but it does not render them mutually unintelligible - the two dialects are still 99% mutually intelligible with each other, and any unintelligibility originates in slang exclusive to that dialect rather than pronunciation.

Etrancoasti also has considerable cross-dialectal variation.

Northern Etrancoasti

 * Guttural R: is pronounced as a uvular trill}}.pproximant . The syllabic  or  is pronounced as . The geminated  is always a uvular trill.
 * The front vowels are centralized to  before coda-position.
 * The diphthongs become  before.
 * is pronounced as a velarized dental . is palatalized to  before  and, but not.
 * are dental
 * are palato-alveolar

Southern Etrancoasti
The accent of Southern Etrancoast shares a lot of features with the Etrandish Copperport dialect, such as the retroflex articulation of R, alveolo-palatal shibilants and affrication of alveolar stop + clusters. It is not known if it was Southern Etrancoasti influencing the Copperport dialect or the other way around.
 * Thick R: is pronounced as a retroflex flap  in the syllable onset, a retroflex approximant  in the syllable coda (except before stop consonants, where it's still a flapped ). The syllabic  or  is pronounced as an R-coloured vowel . The geminated  is an apico-alveolar trill . The retroflex articulation of  is a feature shared with the Etrandish Copperport dialect.
 * Word-initial may be also a trilled, but the retroflex flap  is also used.
 * is pronounced as a clear apico-alveolar . In coda-positions, it may be retracted to a retroflex place of articulation.
 * are lamino-alveolar.
 * are affricated to, another feature shared with the Etrandish Copperport dialect.
 * are alveolo-palatal, another feature shared with the Etrandish Copperport dialect.

Cross-dialectal variation
Some variation in Etrancoasti pronunciation transcends dialectal boundaries. Examples of variation independent of dialects include:
 * The palatalization of the velar before front vowels and
 * In Standard Etrancoasti, they are meant to be consistently pronounced as purely velar . This pronunciation however is restricted to upper-class speakers, and middle-class speakers, many of whom are bilingual and can also speak Etrandish.
 * The use of palatalized velar is currently the most widespread pronunciation in both the North and the South, although  are usually replaced by.
 * The use of post-palatal {{IPA/broad| pre-velar {{IPA/narrow|k̟ʰ k̟~g̟ x̟ ɣ̟}} is also relatively widespread, but declining.
 * The use of purely palatal {{IPA/narrow|cʰ c~ɟ ç ʝ}} is currently the rarest pronunciation, but getting more and more widespread in both the North and the South. Within one or two centuries, it may go from being the rarest to the most widespread.
 * Labio-palatalization:
 * {{IPA/broad|kʷʰ kʷ w}} are meant to be consistently realized as {{IPA/narrow|kʷʰ kʷ~gʷ w}} in Standard Etrancoasti
 * In both the North and the South, the majority of speakers realize {{IPA/broad|kʷʰ kʷ}} as labio-palatalized velar {{IPA/narrow|kᶣʰ kᶣ~gᶣ}} and {{IPA/broad|w}} as a labio-velar {{IPA/narrow|ɥ}} before front vowels.
 * Speakers who completely palatalize to {{IPA/narrow|cʰ c~ɟ ç ʝ}} before front vowels will typically realize {{IPA/broad|kʷʰ kʷ w}} as {{IPA/narrow|cᶣʰ cᶣ~ɟᶣ ɥ}} before front vowels. {{IPA/broad|wi}} may be even coalesced into {{IPA/narrow|y}} instead of {{IPA/narrow|ɥi}} - for example, {{IPA/broad|rɪkʷʰi}} may be pronounced as {{IPA/narrow|ɽɪcy~ʀɪcy}} instead of {{IPA/narrow|ɽɪcᶣʰi~ʀɪcᶣʰi}}.
 * Vowel reduction: the shift of word-final {{IPA/broad|ɑ}} and {{IPA/broad|e}} to {{IPA/narrow|ə}} is not mainstream yet, but getting increasingly widespread in both the North and the South.