ělðrǐn Alphabet

In ělðrǐn, only consonants are considered to be part of the "alphabet" per se; the vowels are considered a sort of "second-class" letter type and always appear separately from the consonants. There is also no canonical ordering of the letters, either consonants or vowels, save that consonants are sorted first, then the high vowels, and finally the low vowels; most sorting methods will in fact ignore vowels altogether until needed as a "tie-breaker" for words with the same set of consonants.

The ělðrǐn tend to be very precise, and as a result their writing system eschews digraphs entirely, and every letter corresponds to precisely one sound.

Consonants

Romanization l m n b ð d f ŋ g j h k r s š t þ v w
IPA l m n b ð d f ŋ g ʒ h k r s ʃ t θ v w

High/Low Vowels

High   Low
Romanization ǐ ě ǒ   ē ā ō
IPA ɪ ɛ ɑ   i e o
The "high" and "low" vowels have no grammatical function in ělðrǐn other than the former always appearing before the latter when sorting.