Welcome, Ladies and Gentlemen to the unveiling of Narunin's alphabet. *Plays fanfare music and pulls back the curtain*
To avoid any confusion, I will try to explain what is going on. For the consonants, I used the our normal letters and letter combinations (eg.: sh) to describe the sounds of the letters, with one exception. That exception and the vowel sounds (vowels and dipthongs) are all explained in
this link. Hopefully you can discern which funny vowel symbols connect with less funny vowel symbols. The last two characters are special. "VS" stands for vowel splitter, which the Narunum use to split any vowels that happen to be together (for example, the Narunum would use a VS between the "i" and the "e" in the name "Rorien"). They do so simply because they think it is more orderly. Besides this, the VS means nothing, sounds like nothing and is generally purposeless. "PC" stands for possesifying character. That, essentially means that if this character is added to the end of a noun, it changes that noun to an adjective. For example, take the word Narunin. If you added the PC to it, (which I currently transliterate as Narunine) it would mean "pertaining to Narunin" and would be pronounced Naruneen (The PC always changes the ending vowel sound to an "ee" sound, except in the case of a word that ends in a double "ee" sound. When that happens, I haven't decided what the PC does.)As always, if you have any questions, feel free to ask!
Hmm. It seems that the above is slightly boring. Therefore, I shall tell you the more interesting facts about my alphabet. First, the letters have families, according to Narunine tradition. As you see, the alphabet is divided first into consonants, then vowels, and finally the miscellaneous characters. Each group is a sort of neighborhood. I won't go into great detail, but in the first neighborhood, the consonants, there are two main families and then three orphans. The head of the first family is the H sound, and all the letters that have a tall stem originate from him. I have not quite decided who the head of the second family is, although I'm leaning towards the F sound (which would mean I would have to rearrange the alphabet. Oh, well). The SH sound is the most different, but it was adopted by the S, Z, and TH group (yes, there are groups within the families.

) Sadly, L, R, and K, are orphans. The vowels are really not related at all. There are a few families though, such as the "a:" and the backwards "a" family, and the two next to them (the funny snake looking ones that mirror each other) are also a family.
My favorite part about the letters is that each has a word meaning (the meaning of each word I am still working on) and when a child is born, the prominent family members give the child a letter as a blessing (or curse). Those letters are arranged to make the child's name. This also causes a popularity in certain letters being used in names, and other letters being hardly used at all.
So there you are. Hopefully this unveiling ceremony was fascinating and I encourage you all to ask questions or tell me what you think of it. Thank you! *bows and walks off the stage*