Scottish like that -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BuBe31j3H9U&NR=1?
So, going through the language file - scottish rolling "r" and hissing "s" and very aspirated "t" are very good. Also take very aspirated "k", like in Armenian... I mean, just very aspirated.
Does anybody have any idea if the diacritics and the rest mean something in the language files? Or can speculate, if one should take them into account.
By the way, I see the word "ngárak", it's got this accent mark, I guess. More importantly, it's got a not most common in European languages in the beginning of a word letter combination "ng". Immediately comes to mind Swahili.
Considering the "th" lack of good reverberative qualities, I've recently discovered an Armenian sound that is like "ts" or Russian "ц", but you put the tip of your tongue behind your upper teeth. Or "th" could be just more aspirated.
If alveoli are taken up by "s", we have to either get rid of "sh", or move it somewhere. Consider pronouncing it in the same position as American "r".
Nasal consonants or what sounds to me like nasal, i.e. n, m, l, just don't want to work at all. I don't know what to do with them.
Something might be done about "g". I thing it could use some softening, that is, the tongue's back tries to touch the roof of the mouth, and aspiration.
Wow, brainstorming. I'm tired.
About vowels. I'm for the notion that languages tend to stick to some part of the mouth. Like, Americans keep their tongue up and back, closer to the roof. French keep it forward and close to the front lower teeth. Russians keep it up and closer to the front. I think we should look for a native feel of vowels with different tongue placement, and then some vowels might form on their own, and some might fall off. Like with Armenian, that only has 4 vowels (at least as far as I'm concerned).
Also, I'm not entirely satisfied with how "ur" for "hearth" sounds. I think it'll benefit from adding "b" to make it "bur". Then "mother" turns into either "bobur", or "borbur", both of which to me sound much nicer than the original.