G

Gêy (uppercase: G, lowercase: g) is the sixth letter in Orish. Its sound is /g/, voiced velar plosive.

Pronunciation
To pronounce the sound of the letter G, block the air with the back of your tongue (dorsum) and your velum (soft palate) and don't let it go out through your nose. When you block the air with your dorsum and your velum push your diaphragm and create an air pressure. Then, open your velum and release the air you have pushed with your diaphragm. Not less important, slightly close your vocal chords and vibrate them.

Justifications for the Presence of its Sound in Orish
/g/ is a common sound in languages that have /k/ and distinguish between unvoiced and voiced obstruent consonants, and it is easy to pronounce for speakers of languages in which /k/ is present and /g/ is absent if they learn to pronounce it correctly.

Justifications for the Spelling Form of this Sound
In many languages that are written in Latin script the letter G is ambiguous, usually represents the hard sound /g/ but before front vowels represents a soft sound, usually /d͡ʒ/, /ʒ/ or /x/. However, even out of the ISO basic Latin alphabet there is no more unambiguous letter that represents this sound, and there are even some languages in which this letter is not as ambiguous, and represents the sound /g/ always, regardless of its position or the letter before or after it (for example, Polish), so this letter is used in Orish for the sound /g/, but as its only sound, there is no soft sound for this letter in Orish. Also, the name of this letter was changed to match it to the sound this letter represents.