Freaklang, indeed.
I usually respond to claims that people X somewhere far away think and feel the
same way as you and me by denying that I think and feel the same way as you,
but perhaps I should in the future simply link to this instead.
Wonderful allophonics, BTW. [n] and [g] as allophones of the same sound is
almost too good to be true. Given that /b/ has an allophone /m/, one wonders if
there used to be an /d/ phoneme that merged with /g/.
Less freaky, but the language is also one with different phonemic inventories
for men and women. How and why do such systems arise?
Andreas