Well, Solitarian might not codify the other languages, but that doesn't stop someone else from doing it! I probably won't do it... but if someone was minded to, I have PHONOLOGICAL DATA on the other langs to share, since I apparently had nothing better to do:
Elvish:
Structure: exact opposite of Dwarvish - all syllables are open, meaning they all end in a vowel (V and CV)
Consonants:
p b t d c ç k q g
f v th s z
m n
w r l y ÿ
In order of occurence:
r l n m th c f v d s t y w b p ÿ [q z k ç g] Points of interest:
1) q, k, ç, g, & z all have extremely low incidences (47, 17, 14, 10, 19; compare with y: at 106!) This may suggest scribal conventions rather than actual phonemes.
a) q, as in English, always precedes u: the sound is probably [kw], and written <qu> is merely an allograph of cw
b) k could easily be an allograph of c -- cf. Latin, which used <k> mainly in words borrowed from Greek
These, and the high incidence of c, suggest that Elvish <c> is the base phoneme, probably always a "hard c" - Elvish
cebela is pronounced
kebela, not *
sebela c) ç may also be scribal, but I have no idea what for. It could just be a rare phoneme.
d) Now, if g and z were scribal, it would disrupt the voiceless-voiced pairs we see in the rest of the consonant inventory (p/b, t/d). Therefore, it's probably best to treat these as rare phonemes also.
2) A single th phoneme also disrupts the voiceless-voiced pairings; th also has a fairly high incidence (466) compared to other fricatives. I wonder if <th> isn't used for two phonemes, voiced and voiceless, just as in English...
3) What is ÿ? It's not much less common than y (104 vs. 141 occurences), so it's probably a separate phoneme - maybe a velar or uvular glide?
Clusters: Elvish has only two clusters: qu and sl. The latter is exceedingly rare, with only 10 occurences.
Due to the strict open-syllable rule, no clusters are possible at syllable boundaries.
Vowels (in order of occurence):
a e (é è) i (í ì) o (ó ò) u (ú ù) Points of interest:
1) a, though the most common vowel, lacks the accented forms seen in the other vowels. Does this suggest a is a very weak vowel, perhaps a schwa?
2) o and u have very low occurences (451 and 193 respectively - compare with i at 1398!).
3) The accented forms are roughly even in distribution, making up ~8-10% of each vowel's occurence. What they represent is anyone's guess - as with Dwarvish, there's not much way to tell.
Human:
Structure: Human allows both open and closed syllables
Consonants:
p b t d k c q g
f v th s z sh h
j? x
m n ñ ng
w r l j?
In order of occurence:
s t r l m d k th p c b n g sh h z ng q w ñ j v f x Points of interest:
1) q is, again, only found as qu, and therefore probably allographic.
2) Both k and c are found in respectable proportions (316 and 255 occurences resp.), so both may be phonemic; however, c may very well be an allograph of k, which would make the /k/ phoneme rank just below /r/ in the order - which wouldn't surprise me, since /k/ is a very common phoneme IRL.
3) As with Elvish th, Human th (and sh) seem to disrupt the pattern of voiceless-voiced pairings. h is not a problem in this case, since a voiced h would be almost indistinguishable from a vowel.
4) What is j? Under the assumption of English orthography it should be an affricate (as in "jewel"); but it might also be a glide, making a y-sound as in German (Johann etc). The latter placement would fit nicely into the pattern, opposite w. Less likely is French pronunciation, as the voiced pair of sh.
5) I am assuming ñ is pronounced as in Spanish, something like n + y.
6) j, ñ, and q(u) never appear word-finally.
Clusters: other than qu, a cursory look shows the following:
sm, st, sl, sp, str, thr
There are, of course, other clusters at syllable boundaries, as in Dwarvish.
Vowels (in order of occurence):
a (á) o i e u Aside from a (1000+) the other vowels fall in the 700-800 occurence range in pretty even distribution.
á is the only accented character, and occurs 48 times. Again, not much to go on. It could just be a fancy scribal a.
Human vowels are pretty boring.
Goblin:
Structure: Goblin allows both open and closed syllables.
Consonants:
Now, Goblin consonants are interesting. Let's start with just basic phonemes:
p b t d k g
s z
x
m n ng
r l
th? A pretty small, standard-looking inventory. Other than outlier x everything is nicely paired up and symmetrical. th has so few occurences (only 6!) that I think it best to treat it as an allograph of t, not a separate phoneme.
And in order of occurence:
s t m n l r k ng z d g p b x [th] with s standing out at a whopping 1523 occurences; the next highest, t, has only 650. x has 262.
BUT: Goblin has an
immense amount of clusters, all involving s: sp, st, sm, sn, and sl. Together these clusters involve a quarter of
all consonants in the Goblin lexicon. If we count these clusters as individual "sounds", our list looks like this:
r st k ng z m n t d s g sp b l sm x sl sn [th] r has 384 occurences; sn has 165. That's only a 220-point range, so the consonants (& clusters) are pretty evenly distributed. Note also that p disappears: it only occurs in the cluster sp.
Based on this, it seems clusters are fundamental to the Goblin consonant system. I don't know what that means, phonologically, but such an overwhelming prevalence can't be ignored.
Vowels:
u (û) o (ö ô) a (å â ä) e (ë ê) u and o predominate at ~1300 occurences each. a has ~700, and e has only ~350. There is no i.
The accented forms are fairly uniformly distributed.
Wierdly, Goblin seems to have the most regular and evenly-distributed phonology of all the languages. You'd think it's be more... chaotic.
Kobold:
Wait, isn't kobold-speak just jibberish? Well yes, but it's interesting jibberish, at least from a phonological point of view.
Since Kobold has no lexicon, I had to draw from kobold names.
From my inquiries, it seems kobold words (or at least names) are made up of 2-3 parts: an optional PREFIX, a ROOT, and an ENDING.
Every name has a ROOT + ENDING, each of which is a single syllable; thus, the shortest kobold name is two syllables, e.g. Jlalmer, Thorsnin, Kaymin.
The ROOT is characterized by one of several vowels: simple vowels o, i, a, u; or uniquely ROOT vowels ay and ee. The ROOT seems always to be a CVC syllable, where C can be any consonant/cluster.
There are only four possible ENDINGs: -in, -is, -us, -er. Every kobold name ends with one of these.
I suspect the ROOT bears primary stress, and the ENDING takes secondary. ROOT vowels may also be long (at least ay and ee).
The PREFIX is not nearly as structured, but still shows some patterns:
It can be 1, 2, or 3 syllables in length
All syllables begin with a consonant/cluster* and end with a vowel (CV)
*The first syllable may begin with a cluster, but no subsequent syllables may - only single consonants.
Every syllable in the PREFIX has the same vowel: a, e, u, or o.
The PREFIX seems to be the most "glossolalic" part of the name, a kind of ecstatic "introduction" to the meat of the word, the ROOT-ENDING. The ROOT-ENDING is structured enough where it probably has actual meaning - I especially suspect the ENDINGs have specific meanings, probably relationships or other descriptors.
Due to the lack of an easy wordlist I haven't examined kobold phonemes (yet).
And here's a short list of kobold names, in case anyone wants to check my data:
prakalalolin dludreelis pologreelis chadajleerbis strobotrinkus jlamer chreelmis thromis klastrunger stolodojlaydis slikipalmin bolbus stradatlaylgis shribleekis srugubujrarsnis slabadastirbis gukujralgin dagaflilbus fombis jatrurbis dibigrogis flafaglaymin thathrayldin prugujrorbin brambin flasraybin chrufuguthleelbis lushleedis peeldis chidreegus fleengis sraymin thumbin tasleemis lathilis klagafafalbin shofofojolmis dobogrumber dlododotunkin grochrarsner chlochreemis seemis shludukuteembus flidreersnus sribififaymus kakus stlomus grulukilbis praylgus sonkin dolobobager trirbus krorsnus pabis fluchaydin jrildus plijleelgis glipluder thrumer jrakalilmus chlidikitayrsnus jrugruldis glodosrarbus shafachomber gimbus jaklulmer tidibiprilmis pralaymbus thastreeldus glugubulalus gripulder guplakus shilichlarbis throgodobrambis slofofluder shikus chokolriris dadalakraymbus frubuthaymin trakalastreelmis dlogofrungis shrudufulreerbus tlubudlobis chlagapreengis tleemis stadashlayrer chlokolopaynker forsnus jloglaybin bushleedis shalmer frisholgin stobobrungin drogofolraydis thidiglomber slichlilgus chafajrigis dlirsnus shrothalbis tligayker sadafumbus jrakabis klifigijlaymin thrulushralgis gagasakis protrolis trukuthlaylbis trudushrorbis payrus deerus sababajalbin lrikis tafathlugin frajraymis kifikithrulgin lrobopuger strugustaker thraylmin taldis bigitlokin chrolosrurus brukugusralmin chlukufulrankus dronkin glikis bleenkus gladin gikikijlilmus shofogothodus tridibislolmin stluflibus jajridus trijlayder tadobis pludreemus dlabrimbus chaylgis dikikitreeldus thlalin stalber kaymin grobothlager stipulmer tlododraynkin glubuplongus flursnis thilislayrber preelgus shrodoboshangus jrilifisleebis chrogofokangis shriligichlirbis fuglimbis slayder chigilibrabus stlubunkis trilmis shafaslilbis flichrumin jradakadirus klafalagrubin kudis shidikidungus thrakabrayrsner broldus blosteemis plijirulgus chloboblidus pleerus flafafeerbus chrukufankin stitheelgis lalalashreembus fladabagleekus lraynker plodolotligus thilgus shligis pabalreembus fagabakaldin trasribis shrilis thribifrikis groburus lrutrilgus dlikikus truducheegis klilmus thrikis klarin jluthayngis drulushraler thorsnin griseebis dayngus dlukudrarbus stajaylmin bithumbin stayrsnus bluluglirsnis katraylgin
That's about as far as one can get with the available data. Everything else needs to be made up, pretty much.