Languages of Teppala: Difference between revisions
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==List of sound changes== | ==List of sound changes== | ||
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<!------ first language ---> | <!------ first language ---> | ||
===Mapi (14000 BC) to Southeast Laban (8000 BC) | |||
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===Southeast Laban (8000 BC) to Proto-Outer-Poswob III (3770 BC) | |||
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===Southeast Laban (8000 BC) to Pre-Proto-Tapilula (3770 BC) | |||
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===Pre-Proto-Tapilula (3770 BC) to Tapilula (500 AD)=== | |||
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tʷ dʷ nʷ k h g hʷ j w</span> and the vowels <em>a e i o u y</em>. All syllables were open and all consonants could occur in all positions. There was a variable stress accent. (Five vowels, really.) | tʷ dʷ nʷ k h g hʷ j w</span> and the vowels <em>a e i o u y</em>. All syllables were open and all consonants could occur in all positions. There was a variable stress accent. (Five vowels, really.) | ||
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</td></tr></tbody></table> | |||
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</ | <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="./pabappa28_files/europe.htm"> | ||
===Tapilula to Gold (year 1900)=== | |||
Alternate names: Ukieipi, G̣ʷidiʕìləs | |||
<p class="body"> | |||
Tapilula inherited from Standard Animal the phonology <em>p b m f fʷ w t d n s l j k ŋ ɣ h q ʔ a i u</em>, where <em>ʔ</em> | |||
represents a glottal stop. All syllables were open and all consonants | |||
could occur in all positions. There was a variable stress accent | |||
distinguishing three tones (<em>à ā á</em>) on the stressed syllable, although phonemically | |||
there were really only two tones, high and low, on both syllables: the three-tone system | |||
was brought up in sandhi only. For initial stress the pattern is: | |||
Low-Low = Low / | |||
High-Low = High / | |||
Low-High = Med / | |||
and for final stress ther pattern is: | |||
Low-Low = Low / | |||
High-Low = Med / | |||
Low-High = High / | |||
High-High = High | |||
<s>(that is, it was the same.) ???Med was originally "falling" | |||
, High "rising".</s> CHANGED JUN 22 2012 | |||
</p><ol> | |||
<li> The aspirated velar stop <b>kʰ</b> became <em>tš</em> before the vowel <em>i</em>. If another vowel followed, the /i/ disappeared. This happened even if the /i/ was accented ... e.g. takʰìa > tačă. | |||
</li><li> The voiced stops <b>b d</b> became <em>v ð</em> in all positions (not labialized). | |||
</li><li> The uvular stop <b>q</b> became <em>k</em> (not aspirated) in all positions. (Still distinguished in spelling because it patterned as a "high" consonant, unlike the low {k}. | |||
</li><li> In word-initial position before another vowel and medially between two other vowels, the bare vowels <b>i u</b> changed to <em>j w</em>. | |||
</li> | |||
< | <li> | ||
</li> | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The voiced fricative <b>v</b> changed to <em>ð</em> in all positions. <b>f</b> (not labialized) changed to <em>ṣ</em> (/þ/). | |||
</li><li> When a "velar" consonant (<b>k ŋ h ɣ l</b>) followed an | |||
accented high tone vowel and the following vowel was the same, that following | |||
vowel disappeared, leaving a closed syllable. (Initial-stress | |||
"diphthongs" metathesized; e.g. <b>ūhi</b> became <em>ūih</em> and <b>āku</b> became <em>āuk</em>.) If the next syllable had begun with a vowel, a <em>ʡ</em> (voiced pharyngeal fricative) was added there. These new syllables were all high tone, and were the only closed syllables in the language. Thus the high tone came to be associated with closed syllables. "l" had been considered a velar consonant because of certain distribution patterns dating from Standard Animal, even though it was not a velarized l. | |||
</li><li> The sequence <b>hk</b> became <em>kʰ</em>. | |||
</li><li> The diphthongs <b>ùu</b> and <b>ìi</b> changed to <em>əu</em> and <em>əi</em> respectively. | |||
</li><li> The diphthongs <b>ùi</b> and <b>ìu</b> changed to <em>ə</em> unless another vowel followed. | |||
</li><li> <s>The diphthongs <b>àa èa ìa òa ùa</b> became <em>ā ē ī ō ū</em>.</s> | |||
</li><li> Word-final glottal stops were deleted, leaving only their influence on tone. | |||
</li><li> The fricative <b>ðʰ</b>, which had arisen from the sequences ðh and hð, changed to <em>ṣ</em>. Thus <b>fʷuhði</b> "mountain" became <em>fʷuṣi</em>. | |||
< | </li><li> The fricative <b>ṣ</b> (/þ/) changed to <em>s</em>. Thus broadly speaking the old voiced aspirates /bh dh/ as well as the old fricatives /f ṣ/ had now all collided as /s/. Nevertheless, plain /ð/ still remained dental, thus the sound combination /ðh/ reappeared almost immediately in new compounds where the memory of the previous sound change had been lost. | ||
</ | |||
</li><li> The new fricative <b>ðʰ</b>, which had re-appeared from the sequences ðh and hð, changed to <em>ṣ</em>. This sound change happened so soon after the last that it seemed merely that the previous sound change had had many exceptions. | |||
< | </li><li> Any remaining <b>ð</b> at the start of a word or after a consonant was changed to a hard <em>d</em>, thus creating yet another new /dʰ/, which soon changed to /tʰ/ in most branches except in words where it remained transparent as a compound of a word ending in -h (for -s) and one beginning in d-. | ||
</ | |||
</li><li> Accented syllables gained a pharyngeal | |||
<em>ʕ</em> as an onset if a consonant was not already there. <s>If the syllable began with a glottal stop, it changed to <em>ʢ</em>. </s> If there was an /x/ (resulting from syllable-final /h/), it became <em>ĥ</em> (a "true" /h/, not like {h} which really is /x/). | |||
Thus, all long vowels now had their stress on the first vowel and thus | |||
had a falling tone, and the glottal stop could not begin an accented | |||
syllable. | |||
Additionally, the consonants <b>w j</b> changed to <em>ʕʷ ʕʲ</em>, which were soon strengthened to gʷ gʲ in some situations (those are fricatives). | |||
< | </li><li> After long vowels, all consonants became voiced. | ||
Also, consonants occurring after initial vowels also became voiced. | |||
This created the new consonants <em>b v vʷ d z ġ dž</em> (the glottal stop disappeared). Thus, final <b>-s</b> in words like hʷīs became <em>-z</em>. However, analogy made it so that the change was confined to open syllables in most words. | |||
</ | </li><li> A taboo on velar consonants before vowels developed | ||
< | from an earlier collision of certain sounds in some words: in polite or | ||
deferential speech, the velar consonants <b>k ġ h g l</b> had shifted to <em>ts dz š ž l'</em>. In addition, the uvular approximant <b>r</b> was often fronted to a bilabial <em>β</em> and the velar nasal <b>ŋ</b> to a palatal <em>ñ</em>. Since there were no phonemes with these values in other contexts, there was no confusion to be had. This happened mostly with the speakers of what would later become Pabappa. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> After initial unstressed /u/, all consonants became labialized. Thus uġau "heart" > uġʷau. This change extended even to clusters. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> <s> Initial unstressed /o/ and /e/ rose to /u/ and /i/ respectively. (Hadnt they already bottomed out?)</s> (unless this remains for foreign loans) | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Initial vowels were deleted unless an illegal consonant cluster would have resulted. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The fricatives <b>fʷ vʷ</b> became <em>hʷ ʕʷ</em> (though ʕʷ was gʷ allophonically). | |||
</li> | |||
< | <li> All schwas and diphthongs became low tone. | ||
</li> | |||
<li> | <li> The glottal stop disappeared in all positions. | ||
</li> | |||
<li> <b>ʢ</b> became the new glottal stop. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Labialized consonants lost their labialization when occuring after another labial or labialized consonant (used to explain bàigʷa > bàiga). This also affected labialized consonants occurring before syllabic ṁ ? | |||
</li> | |||
<li> After a stressed syllable, intervocalic <b>ʕ ʕʷ</b> became <em>g gʷ</em>. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> <s> Vowel sequences like <b>ea</b> and <b>oa</b> changed to <em>ia</em>, <em>ua</em>, etc. unless the e/o was accented.</s> | |||
</li> | |||
<li> <s> The vowel sequences <b>àa èa òa</b> became <em>ā ē ō</em>.</s> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | |||
<li> The velar fricatives <b>h ɣ</b> were rounded to <em>hʷ ʕʷ</em> before <em>u</em>. | |||
</li><li> <s> The accent was shifted to the first syllable in all words. (??)</s> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> The consonant sequence <b>sh</b> (e.g. bisha "stick, twig") became <em>ss</em>. Likewise <b>shʷ</b> became <em>ssʷ</em>, except at the beginning of a word, where it was simply <em>sʷ</em>. This is distinct from the consonant sequence /sw/ which was much more common. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The voiceless fricatives <b>sʲ zʲ</b> became <em>š ž</em> unconditionally. (Thus mhyjax > mʰəyâ > fiâ > siâ > šâ, later ħâ).</li> | |||
<li> | <li> Vowel sequences like <b>ae ao</b>, where the a was unaccented, shifted to <em>ie uo</em>, etc. ("The karaoke shift".) | ||
</li> | |||
<li> Labialized fricatives that were not velar changed to "harsh" postvelar ones. e.g. <b>sʷ zʷ</b> became <em>ħʷ ʕʷ</em>. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The vowels <b>e o</b> both changed to <em>a</em> in all positions. (Short forms only.) | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The voiceless fricatives <b>š ž</b> became <em>ħ ʕ</em> unconditionally. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> NOTE: THERE WAS AN ADDITIONAL SOUND: PROBABLY ś, AN EJECTIVE FRICATIVE. IT IS THE SORCE OF ALL F IN BABA THAT IS S IN THAOA BUT NOT XW IN KHULLS. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Now the politeness taboo became extended to final | |||
velars and to consonant clusters, which had up to now always been | |||
required to begin with a velar consonant. <b>k</b> became <em>p</em> in syllable-final position except when word-final, in which case it became <em>ts</em>. <b>g</b> became <em>b</em> and <em>dz</em> accordingly. <b>ŋ</b> assimilated in word-medial position and became the glottal nasal <em>~</em> word-finally. Meanwhile, the velar fricatives <b>h ɣ</b> shifted to <em>s z</em> in both positions. | |||
All of this affected only polite speech. | |||
</li><li> | </li><li> Alliterative compounds whose first component was | ||
monosyllabic came to use the standalone form of the word rather than | |||
the connective. Previously there would have been no difference, but now | |||
that velar consonants had split into two there was a difference: | |||
word-medial <b>~</b> became <em>m</em> (from <b>~β</b>) rather than <b>ñ</b>. | |||
Because of the fact that politeness registers now affected compounding | |||
processes, yielding a velar connecting consonant in the informal | |||
register but a labial or alveolar in the polite register, some word | |||
pairs came to have more than one possible mutual compound, and the | |||
forms were borrowed between the speech registers. Thus the barriers | |||
between the speech registers began to break down. | |||
<br><br>Thus Ukieipi had the consonants <em>p b f v m w hʷ ʕʷ t d ṣ ð s z n l č ǯ j k g h ɣ r</em> and the vowels <em>a i u ə</em>. | |||
There was a contrast between high and low tone, but it was only on the | |||
first syllable and it was mostly determined by what consonant began the | |||
word. Ukieipi was confined to Fox Island, even though other languages from Tapilula had already left the island. | |||
</li></ol> | |||
</ | </td></tr></tbody></table> | ||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="115"></td><td> | |||
</td></tr></tbody></table> | |||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="115"></td><td style="width: 9px"> | |||
<p> </p> | |||
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< | </td></tr></tbody></table> | ||
</ | <table><tbody><tr><td width="115" valign="top"><br><br><br><a href="file://alxon/Users/Soap/Documents/blop2/khulls.html">Khulls</a></td><td> | ||
| |||
===Gold (1900) to Khulls (4700)=== | |||
This language was originally spoken near Bābākiam, in the city of Pabap. | |||
< | <p class="body"> | ||
</ | Initial phoneme inventory: /p b f v m w t d s z n l č ǯ j k g ŋ h ɣ r a i u ə/ | ||
<br>Four tones: <em>ă</em> indicates stressed short vowels with no tone (i.e. a low tone), <em>à</em> indicates stressed short vowels with high tone, <em>ā</em> indicates stressed long vowels with a falling tone (seen as high + low), and <em>á</em> indicates stressed long vowels with a rising tone (seen as low + high). Two short stressed high vowels (e.g. àà) do not make a long vowel because there is an inherent glottal stop in the à tone whenever it comes before another vowel or at the end of a word. Thus the glottal stop could be considered marginally phonemic. Unstressed vowels can have tone in a shadowy way: no marker indicates a low tone, and a dot above (ȧ) indicates a high tone. However, these unstressed high tones are mostly swallowed except in long sequences of low tones. | |||
< | <br> | ||
Voiced stops other than "d" are rare, and cannot occur after another consonant except in some compounds. That is, there is no /mb/, /bb/, etc. But /d/ is an exception to this rule because it arose from different environments. /b/ and /g/ were marginal, in fact, and /g/ is generally spelled ğ or ġ which leaves {g} free for the much more common phoneme /ɣ/. But this is not carried over to the phonemic listings below. | |||
</p><ol> | |||
<li> All schwas became low-tone (previously they had all been high-tone). | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> < | <li> The vowels <b>a à ā aa</b> changed to <em>a à ā á</em>. <b>i ì ī ii</b> became <em>i ì ī í</em>. <b>u ù ū uu</b> became <em>u ù ū ú</em>. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> <b>aə āə àə áə</b> changed to <em>ā</em>. Schwa after a vowel, in general, assimilated to that vowel along the lines of the sound change here. (but did they even exist? The only missing conso is the glottal stop) | ||
</li> | |||
<li> The diphthongs <b>əi ài</b> both changed to <em>ē</em>. <b>àu</b> became <em>ō</em> (there were no short versions of these vowels at this time.) | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | |||
<li> The uvular <b>r</b> changed to <em>ʢ</em> (a voiced pharyngeal fricative). | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Fricatives preceded by ʕ became voiced. e.g. <b>ʕs</b> ---> <em>z</em>. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The vowel <b>u</b>, in all tones and lengths, changed to <em>o</em> of the same tone and length. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Unaccented long vowels (of any tone) became short. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Sequences like <b>aʕa</b> became pharyngealized vowels; these were considered a tone all their own and thus could not have tone (or length) distinctions. Pharyngealized vowels are spelled <em>â</em>, sometimes with an "x" before or after the vowel depending on the origin of the tone (more later). Thus <b>ŋoʕos</b> "evil spirit" became <em>ŋôs</em>. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | |||
<li> Most voiced fricatives (but not ʕ) disappeared in unstressed positions e.g. <b>z</b> ---> <em>0</em>. In stressed positions, they became <em>ʕ</em>. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Nondorsal + dorsal clusters such as <b>pk tk mŋ nŋ </b> changed to <em>ppˁ ttˁ mm nn</em>. Note that these only occurred in syllable onsets, and chiefly only grammatically inflected forms of words with simple consonants. (ˁ is a shortcut to show that they were not aspirated) | ||
</li> | |||
<li> The clusters <b>pŋ tŋ</b> became <em>pˁ tˁ</em> (a shortcut to show that they were not aspirated) and if the syllable was accented, caused the following vowel to become pharyngealized. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Before or after a pharyngealized consonant, the vowel <b>i</b> became <em>e</em>. | |||
<b>CANCELLED!!!</b></li> | |||
<li> The aspirated stop <b>dʰ</b> became <em>tʰ</em>. (There was no bʰ). | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The clusters <b>mk nk</b> became <em>mpˁ ntˁ</em>. (Unaspirated.) | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The clusters <b>km kn kŋ</b> became <em>m n ŋ</em> but caused the preceding vowel (this could not be word-initial) to acquire the checked tone <em>v̀</em>. Thus <b>akmà</b> "cherry" became <em>àmà</em>, and words with two checked tones in a row were created. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The clusters <b>kʕ ŋʕ</b> became <em>k ŋ</em> and pharyngealized the following vowel (if it was accented). Thus <b>loŋʕà</b> "womb" became <em>loŋâ</em>. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> <s>The unaspirated voiceless stops <b>p t</b> became voiced: <em>b d</em>. k did not change.</s> | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The schwa vowel disappeared in all positions unless an illegal consonant cluster would be created. It labialized any consonant that preceded it. Thus labialized versions of all consonants were created. In cases where the schwa did not disappear, it changed to <em>u</em> (always low tone). If the syllable ended in the final consonant (which was particularly common after schwa), instead of becoming an "illegal" cluster, the consonant became syllabic. Thus the syllabic consonants <em>s: m: p: z: l:</em> were created. (Labializing influence caused the nasal and stop to be "m" and "p", as in | |||
Poswa.) Alternate spellings: s̄ p̄ m̄ l̄ z̄ The p was non-aspirated.</li> | |||
<li> Where /ə/ collapsed, stress shifted syllables to the nearest adjacent one. This tone was mid-tone (ă) unless there had been a "dot" tone previously. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> However the syllabic <b>p:</b> changed to <em>ʷ</em> before another consonant and to a regular | |||
non-aspirated <em>pˁ</em> in word-final position. The syllabic s̄ changed to ś (aspirated) before a vowel and s̄́ in a closed syllable (but these are not distinguished in spelling). | |||
</li> | |||
<li> After a syllabic nasal, the final stop <b>k</b> (which was the only one that did occur) changed to match the position of the nasal. Thus <em>ṁp ṅt ŋ̇k</em> were created. | |||
Again, these were all non-aspirated and were often thought of as glottal stops | |||
by foreigners.</li> | |||
<li> Sequences like <b>hṁm</b> (in kahṁma "dark-skinned") changed to <em>ṁʰ</em>, and so on. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Labialized coronals <b>tʷ dʷ nʷ</b> changed to <em>kʰʷ gʷ ŋʷ</em> <s></s>before the vowel /a/ or /o/ (probably before *all* vowels eventually)unconditionally. Note that /dʷ/ ripens into a true /ġʷ/ later on, not the fricative gʷ. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The consonant cluster <b>hʷg</b> became <em>kʰʷ</em> (not xʷ, even though g was a fricative). | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The cluster <b>nð</b> (spelled nd) became <em>ṇ</em> (a dental nasal). (or was it nd all along?) <b>mv</b> became <em>ṃ</em> (a labiodental nasal). | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The voiceless fricative <b>hʷ~f</b> became <em>xʷ</em> (not hʷ) in all positions. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The clusters <b>mb nd nġ</b> became <em>??</em>. (maybe they just stayed on as marginal phonemes) | |||
</li> | |||
<li> <s>Pharyngealized vowels cancelled the aspiration of any consonants that preceded them. This process remained productive through the end of the use of the pharyngealized tone.</s> | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The voiced sounds <b>b bʷ v vʷ</b> changed to <em>ʢʷ</em>. <b>ġ</b> changed to <em>ɣ</em> (usually spelled g). | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The coronals <b>č ǯ</b> became <em>š ž</em> in all positions. | |||
</li> | |||
< | <li> The voiced stop <b>d</b> became <em>l</em> in initial position, but <em>r</em> (a flap) elsewhere. <s> However it stayed as d before another l, or after a consonant such as k or ŋ. Also it didnt change if it was a stressed syllable onset.</s>This did not affect dʷ. | ||
< | </li> | ||
<li> The voiceless fricative <b>h</b> strengthened into <em>x</em> in most positions ... anything other than being after a stop or nasal. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Final <b>k</b> raised the preceding vowel to a high tone à (á if it was long) and then disappeared, though it left an allophonic glottal stop in some positions. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Palatalized velars, such as <b>kʲ xʲ</b>, became postalveolar. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The clusters <b>ṗs ṗš</b> became <em>ps pš</em> (that is, the /p/ became aspirated). | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The sequences <b>ʕə ʕʷə</b> both became <em>û</em>. <b>ʕəs</b> became a syllabic <em>ż</em>. | |||
</li> | |||
< | <li> The labialized fricative <b>šʷ</b> became <em>hʷ</em>. | ||
</li> | |||
< | <li> Fricatives before syllabic nasals disappeared, but changed the preceding tone to high as if they had been syllable-final. | ||
</li> | |||
</ | <li> <b>ya yo</b> (on all tones) > <em>ye</em>. | ||
</li> | |||
< | <li> | ||
<br>(Early Poswa-era changes) ... NOT shared by Moonshine | |||
</li> | |||
<li> | |||
</li><li> Nasal consonants followed by /j/ became voiced stops: <b>my ñy</b> became <em>by ǯy</em>. (This includes the reflexes of /ny/ and /ŋy/.) | |||
<li> | </li><li> The palatal glide /j/ was deleted when not before a high vowel (it was only /e i u/ by now anyway). | ||
<li> | </li><li> | ||
</li><li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The clusters <b>ml nl ŋl</b> changed to <em>bl dl ġl</em>, thus restoring voiced stops to a marginal phonemic position. WHAT ABOUT PALATALS? | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> The labialized consonants <b>mʷ nʷ ŋʷ</b> changed to <em>bʷ dʷ ġʷ</em>. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The sound /l/ disappeared after a voiced stop: the clusters <b>bl dl ġl</b> changed to <em>b d ġ</em>. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> The voiceless labialized nasals <b>mʷʰ nʷʰ ŋʷʰ</b> changed to <em>mpʷ ntʷ ŋkʷʰ</em>. Non-labialized aspirated nasals also changed. In initial position, the nasal element dropped out. Thus there was once again a phonemic /tʷ/ in the language. However, there were some words such as kʷhʷnōn "beak" where there was an initial consonant as well, and in these cases the word became kʷhʷṅtōn. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
</ol> | |||
< | Thus Gold's original four tone system was preserved unchanged in Khulls: <em>ă à ā á</em> (with unstressed variants <em>a ȧ</em>). However, minimal pairs between ā and á were few, and the whole system could still be analyzed as a length contrast, with ă corresponding to bare short vowels, à to short vowels followed by a glottal stop, ā to long vowels, and á to sequences of two short vowels (or in some words, one long vowel followed by a glottal stop). This is the method that was used for transcription of loanwords into Bābākiam. <br><br> The final phonology of Kuroras was /p pʷ m mʷ w t n s l r š ž j k ŋ x ɣ kʷ ŋʷ xʷ ɣʷ ʔ h ʢ hʷ ʢʷ b d ġ/ for consonants and /a e i o u ə/ with four tones for vowels. Dipthongs are not distinguished from vowel sequences and are mostly determined by accentuation patterns and tone. Many of the consonants are very marginal: /b d ġ bʷ dʷ ġʷ h hʷ ṃ ʔ ʢ ɣʷ/ all occurred in very restricted environments. Most of the labialized consonants were not particularly common either. Thus the "major" consonants were just /p m w t n s l r š ž j k kʷ ŋ x ɣ xʷ ʢʷ/. | ||
</ | |||
<br><br>Kuroras is unusual in that it has only unconditional changes for its | |||
vowels, apart from a few changes in tone. The other languages that | |||
descended from Ukieipi all had a few conditional changes that "filled out" | |||
the vowel system. Thus, even though Kuroras has five vowels, the | |||
vowels /e/ and /u/ are quite rare, because they descend from diphthongs that | |||
were themselves rare.</td></tr></tbody></table> | |||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="185"></td><td> | |||
| |||
====Khulls to Sarapios(6500?)==== | |||
( very conservative) | |||
<p class="body"> | |||
Initial phoneme inventory: /p pʷ m mʷ w t n s l r š ž j k ŋ x ɣ kʷ ŋʷ xʷ ɣʷ ʔ h ʕ hʷ ʕʷ/ for consonants and /a e i o u ə/ with four tones for vowels. Dipthongs are not distinguished from vowel sequences and are mostly determined by accentuation patterns and tone. Kuroras had a large inventory of "laryngeal" consonants: /x ɣ ʢ h xʷ ɣʷ ʢʷ hʷ/. But five of these are mostly marginal near-allophones of the other three, and indeed, half of the total consonant inventory consists of phonemes that would be considered "marginal". The stops /p/ and /t/ are fundamentally aspirated, but /k/ is not. | |||
< | <br><em>p pʷ t kʷ</em> Are fundamentally aspirated, but occasionally appear as unaspirated, and are spelled ṗ ṗʷ ṭ k̩ʷ. These generally occur in place of clusters when the aspirated stops occured before a phoneme such as ʢ. | ||
< | <br><em>bʷ b d ġ ġʷ</em> Rare voiced stops, mostly confined to clusters. Unlike the unaspirated stops above, these generally arise from nasals. | ||
< | <br><em>kʰ</em> Unlike the other voiceless stops, /k/ in Kuroras is usually unaspirated. But it does sometimes occur with aspiration, usually indicating that aspiration from another stop has carried over to a preceding /k/. | ||
< | <br><em>ʕ</em> Mostly occurs to break up vowel hiatus. | ||
< | <br><em>ʔ</em> Although this phoneme is directly inherited from the parent language, it is very rare, generally surviving in compounds of a word that previously ended in ʕ (not ʔ) followed by a word beginning in a vowel. | ||
<br><em>ɣʷ</em> Arises mostly from clusters such as ɣw and ɣʕʷ, and occasionally occurs as a word-initial voiced variant of xʷ. | |||
< | <br><em>mʰ nʰ ŋʰ lʰ rʰ</em> Rare, originating entirely from clusters. | ||
< | <br><em>h hʷ</em> Mostly confined to occurring after a consonant. These would be considered post-consonantal allophones of x xʷ if not for the existence of a few words with the clusters kx and kxʷ. Also there are a few words with bare /h/. | ||
<br><br>The consonant phonology with marginal consonants indicated in red would be: /<em>pʷʰ pʰ tʰ k kʷʰ s š ž r x xʷ ɣ ʕʷ m n ŋ w l j</em> <b>ṗʷ ṗ ṭ bʷ b d ġ ġʷ kʰ kʷ ʔ h hʷ ʕ ɣʷ mʰ nʰ ŋʰ lʰ rʰ</b>/. | |||
</p> | |||
< | <ol> | ||
<li> The labialized fricative <b>ʢʷ</b> became <em>r</em> (uvular) in all positions. The inherited alveolar flap r can be spelled ř or ŕ. | |||
<li> The | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Labialized labials delabialized before the vowel /u/. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> All pharyngealized vowels became low-tone pharyngealized. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> The fricatives <b>xʷ x hʷ h</b> all merged as <em>x</em>. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The ă and â tones both merged as <em>â</em> (pharyngealized, long, low). | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Unaccented vowels on either side of an ā-tone vowel became low (<em>ȁ</em>). | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Syllables beginning with a voiced fricative or stop became low-tone. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Other unaccented vowels became medium tone. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> All fricatives (except r) became voiceless. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> All low-tone vowels became pharyngealized (that is, there was only one low tone now, and it was always pharyngealized). | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Remaining voiced stops devoiced. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> Short vowels became silent or reduced to coarticulations if the resulting consonant cluster was acceptable (very similar to the "Debra shifts" of Pabappa and Poswa). | |||
</li> | |||
<li> | <li> Vowel length disappeared. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Stress disappeared; Sarapios now had only tone. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
</ol> | |||
</td></tr></tbody></table> | |||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="185"></td><td> | |||
| |||
====Khulls to Ogili (6800)==== | |||
(Echo is 8500, this is the parent language) | |||
<p class="body"> | |||
Initial phoneme inventory: /p pʷ m mʷ w t n s l r š ž j k ŋ x ɣ kʷ ŋʷ xʷ ɣʷ ʔ h ʢ hʷ ʢʷ ġʷ/ for consonants and /a e i o u ə/ with four tones for vowels. Dipthongs are not distinguished from vowel sequences and are mostly determined by accentuation patterns and tone. | |||
</p><ol> | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The lateral <b>l</b> disappeared after a voiced stop. (e.g. bl dl gl > b d g). | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Unaspirated voiceless stops in a pharyngealized syllable became voiced. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Syllabic <b>hʷ</b> (common as a conditioned alternant of syllabic /s/) became <em>hʷə</em>. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The unaspirated voiceless stops <b>ṗ ṭ k kʷ</b> became voiced stops <em>b d g ġʷ</em>. (This is the same as the previous change, but generalized to all syllables.) | |||
</li> | |||
</ | <li> The alveolar flap <b>r</b> became <em>n</em> in all positions. | ||
</li> | |||
<li> The labialized velar consonants <b>kʷ xʷ</b> merged as <em>pʷ</em>. <b>hʷ</b> became <em>fʷ</em>. <b>sʷ</b> and <b>šʷ</b> (e.g. in the word for "bomb") became <em>pʷfʷ</em>. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The labialized velar consonants <b>ġʷ gʷ</b> merged as <em>bʷ</em>. <b>ʕʷ</b> became <em>vʷ</em>. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> All pharyngealized vowels became low-tone pharyngealized. | ||
</li> | |||
<li> The voiceless nasals <b>mʰ nʰ ŋʰ</b> became <em>mp nt ŋk</em>. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> The post-alveolar fricatives <b>š ž</b> changed to <em>s z</em>. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The vowel <b>o</b> changed to <em>ə</em> (also spelled /ɜ/) in all positions. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The vowel <b>u</b> changed to <em>ɨ</em> (also spelled /и/) in all positions. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> | <li> Geminate consonants changed to normal ones; e.g. <b>píssìná</b> "toilet" became <em>písìná</em>. No tone change? | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | |||
</li> | |||
< | <li> Sequences such as <b>owi</b> and <b>iya</b> where the first vowel was accented became <em>ovʷi iža</em>, etc. | ||
</li> | |||
<li> Labialized labials delabalized in all positions. | |||
</li> | |||
< | <li> <s>Labialized consonants delabialized, but created new vowels <em>â ê î ô û ə̂</em> (IPA /O u y u y u/). </s> <b>CANCELLED!!!</b> | ||
</li> | |||
< | <li> The voiced stop <b>ġ</b> became <em>ɣ</em> between vowels. | ||
</li> | |||
< | <li> The nasal <b>ŋ</b> disappeared between vowels and in initial position. | ||
</li> | |||
< | <li> If there were two labial stops/nasals in a row with a vowel between them, the first one changed to coronal unless the vowel was long. Thus <b>pamà</b> "cold" changed to <em>tamà</em>, but <b>pōpa</b> "children" remained <em>pōpa</em> and <b>povyn</b> "crab" remained <em>povyn</em>. <s> If either of the stops was labialized, however, this shift did not happened.</s> | ||
</li> | |||
<li> If there were two velar stops/nasals in a row with a vowel between them, the first one changed to coronal unless the vowel was long. | |||
</li> | |||
< | <li> Vowel length disappeared. | ||
</ | </li> | ||
<li> Stress disappeared; Echo now had only tone. | |||
</li> | |||
< | <li> | ||
</li> | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | |||
< | </ol> | ||
Final phonology: /p b m f w t d n s l r š ž j k ŋ g x/ for consonants and /a e i o u O/ for vowels. | |||
< | </td></tr></tbody></table> | ||
</ | |||
< | <table><tbody><tr><td width="115"></td><td> | ||
</ | | ||
===pre-Gold (1085) to Thaoa (2668)=== | |||
NOTE: THIS LANGUAGE SPLITS OFF FROM the Tapilula-Gold line in 1085 AD, thus those sound chanes must be cut. | |||
(expect about 90 changes to bring this in line with Blop) | |||
<p class="body"> | |||
Initial phoneme inventory: /p b f v m w t d s z n l č ǯ j k g ŋ h ɣ r a i u ə/ | |||
<br>Starts arond 1900. Possibly Palli breaks off at the bfv > b stage, changing it to v instead, and later to f. | |||
</p><ol> | |||
<li> | <li> ī > ei, ū > ou. | ||
</li> | |||
<li> r > ʡ | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> ʷa ʷi ʷu ʷə > ʷo ʷə ʷū wu. Possibly second one is uj. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> final /p/ changed to k. /m/ stayed as m. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> High tone > ʔ at end of silab (distinct from k) | |||
< | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> final ʔ disappears after diphthongs and long vowels (it was redundant) | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> v g > r (distinct from ʔ) intervocalically. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> All voiceless stops become aspirated in initial position. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> Voiced stops become voiceless in initial position. ʡ > h | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> ai au > ae ao; aʡi aʡu > e o. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> əi əu > oi eu. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> ā > aʡ, aa > ʡa. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> voiceless stop + ʡ > voiced stop. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> mh nh ŋh > mp nt ŋk | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> bh dh gh > ph th kh | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> Clusters like kʰn (in tʰikʰnan "vomit") become all voiceless and aspirated --- so tʰikʰtʰan (or tʰiktʰan), etc. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> f > ṣ (theta). Surviving /v/ > ẓ > z | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> z > l | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> The semivowel /y/ became /t/ between a voiceless stop and a vowel (e.g. kya > kta) | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The semivowel /w/ became /p/ between a voiceless stop and a vowel (e.g. kwa > kpa) | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The semivowel /y/ became /s/ between an aspirated stop and a vowel (e.g. khya > ksa) | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The semivowel /w/ became /f/ between an aspirated stop and a vowel (e.g. khwa > kfa) | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> For the above changes, it was /d b z v/ if voiced. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> For the above changes, if the cluster was word-initial, the first element disappeared. (e.g. kpi > pi) | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> For nasals, it's just /mm/ for the labial and ñ (spelled as ny) for the palatal. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The semivowel /y/ after a voiceless fricative turned that fricative into š and disappeared. | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The semivowel /w/ became /f/ between a voiceless fricative and a vowel (e.g. swa > sfa) | |||
<li> | </li> | ||
<li> tt > tš | |||
</li> | |||
<li> ly > ž, lw > ʡw | |||
</li> | |||
<li> voiced fric + y > ž; voiced fric + w > v (just that's it). f was spelled {v} now. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> ry > ž, rw > ʡw | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Final -s > -t ? | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> The semivowel /w/ became /p/ between a voiceless stop and a vowel (e.g. kwa > kpa) | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> tp > pp | ||
</li> | |||
<li> voiced consonants became voiceless if preceded by a vless (even if over a vowel) | |||
</li> | |||
<li> Final ʔ > long vowel? | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> FInal /k/ > ʔ. | ||
</li> | |||
<li> awa & aya > ō ē. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> ǯ > /j/ or /ž/ | |||
</li> | |||
<li> f v b > all merge as b (indistinct /w/-like sound; b is to w as ž is to y). THis happened rougly in the year 3600? | |||
</li> | |||
<li> **Clusters such as /hp/ (almost exclusively in CaC- compounds) metathesized to /ph/, etc. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> mb nd ŋg > mp nt ŋk | |||
</li> | |||
</ | <li> If two consos in a row were aspirated, the unaccented one loses aspiration. | ||
</li> | |||
< | <li> ei > e; eih > ei; ou > o; ouh > ou. | ||
</li> | |||
<li> ao > ea; aoh > ao. The rare triphthong aou > ao as | |||
well.</li> | |||
< | <li> FInal h > long vowel. | ||
</li> | |||
<li> Final ɣ (or ʡ) changed to n (a weak nasal that assimilates). | |||
</li> | |||
<li> t > tš (except in certain clusters, such as kt & pt, or if aspirated) | |||
</li> | |||
<li> s z > š ž; ṣ > s | |||
</li> | |||
<li> ɣ > x (?) (If so this is where Palli does v > f). ~4000 year. | |||
< | |||
( | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | |||
<li> ei ou > ai au | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Aspiration was lost when a consonant was preceded by a glottal stop. e.g. ʔth > ʔt. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> d > t | ||
</li> | |||
<li> Remaining voiced stops became nasals. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> k > ʔ some intervocals (kk > k; this does not affect aspirated k) | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> If two aspirated consoants occur together, the first loses aspiration. Thus word-initial /t/ was created. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | |||
<li> ala > al, etc. (but not alaʔ) | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> eu > ia | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> ael (but not ail) > al. CONTROVERISL !!! *pymphal | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> ʕʲ > ž (e.g. kʰuʕia "urine" > kʰuža). | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
< | |||
Final phoneme inventory: /p m w t s n l č ñ j k h x ŋ ɣ r ʡ ʔ š | a e i o u ə/ maybe b ž | |||
<br>(š ñ č could be argued to be not phonetic) | |||
<br>This is really just the Middle Stage (Thaoa) ... | |||
<S>probably contemporary with Babakiam.</s> <-------- '''FALSE!!!!!! ''' There were also ā ē ī ō ū ai au ia ea ao | |||
</ol> | |||
</td></tr></tbody></table> | |||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="185"></td><td> | |||
| |||
====Thaoa (2668 AD) to Palli (~4500?)==== | |||
<p class="body"> | |||
Initial phoneme inventory: /p m w t s n l č ñ j k h x ŋ ɣ r ʡ ʔ š | a e i o u ə/ maybe b ž | |||
</p><ol> | |||
<li> The clusters <b>ʔm ʔn ʔŋ</b> became <em>b d g</em>. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> All sequences of a vowel followed by a glottal stop became long vowels. That is, <b>aʔ eʔ iʔ oʔ uʔ əʔ</b> became <em>ā ē ī ō ū ə̄</em>. | ||
< | |||
< | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The distinction between long vowels and doubled short vowels was lost: all long vowels became doubled. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The | <li> The short vowels <b>e o</b> became <em>ə</em> in all positions. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The | <li> The long vowels <b>ē ō</b> changed to <em>iə uə</em> in all positions. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The | |||
<li> The distinction between long vowels and doubled short vowels was lost: all long vowels became doubled. | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> The voiced approximants <b>b ž</b> changed to <em>ʢ</em>. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> The vowel sequences <b>ii uu</b> became <em>ʲə ʷə</em> with the co-articulations cleaving on to the preceding consonant???. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> The diphthongs <b>ai au</b> became <em>əi əu</em> in all positions. | |||
<li> The | |||
< | |||
< | |||
< | |||
</ | |||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> Short vowels <b>i u</b> both became <em>ə</em>?????. contradicts change listed below | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li> | <li> | ||
< | The labialized consonants <b>bʷ žʷ</b> changed to <em>b</em> unconditionally. | ||
</ | |||
< | |||
</ | |||
</li><li> The palatalized consonants <b>bʲ žʲ</b> changed to <em>ž</em> unconditionally. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> | |||
< | |||
</ | |||
< | |||
</ | |||
<li> | </li><li> Sequences of two vowels in which the first vowel was <b>i</b> or <b>u</b> | ||
</ | became rising diphthongs. Then all clusters of a consonant followed by | ||
a semivowel came to be pronounced as coarticulated single consonants. | |||
Thus <b>bua</b> became <em>bʷa</em>, <b>bia</b> became <em>bʲa</em>, and so on. <b>ñ</b> was assimilated as <em>nʲ</em>. (This change means nearly nothing, it is just here to show where Babakiam is.) | |||
</li><li> The long vowels <b>ī ū</b> became <em>ʲi ʷu</em> in all positions. | |||
<li> | </li><li> Doubled labials became rounded (e.g. <b>pp</b> ---> <em>ppw</em>). | ||
< | |||
< | |||
< | |||
< | |||
<li> | </li><li> <b>əi</b> shifted to <em>e</em> and <b>əu</b> shifted to <em>o</em>. | ||
</ | |||
</ | |||
< | |||
</ | |||
< | |||
</ | |||
</li><li> In word-internal position, the labials <b>p b f</b> became doubled (and velarized). (or maybe it was just p) | |||
</li> | |||
<li> | </li><li> pp > p > b > d .... chain shift? It doesnt really matter because much pp changes to p below anyway. | ||
</ | |||
</li><li> In word-final position, or before a non-alveolar consonant, the consonant <b>s</b> shifted to <em>š</em>. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> | |||
</li> | |||
<li> | |||
</ | |||
< | |||
</ | |||
</li><li> <b>š</b> became <em>ž</em> before a voiced consonant. | |||
</li><li> The clusters <b>mp mf nt ns nš</b> became <em>mb mp nd nt nč</em> respectively. | |||
</ | </li><li> Double labials in consecutive syllables became single (e.g. <b>pabappa</b> --> <em>pabapa</em>). | ||
< | |||
< | |||
<li> The | </li><li> The labial consonants <b>p b f</b> became <em>k ɣ h</em> unconditionally. | ||
</li> | </li><li> The consonants <b>č ž š</b> became <em>ts z s</em> unconditionally. (<em>kʲ</em> did not shift because at the time it had come to behave like a cluster.) | ||
<li> The | |||
</li><li> The vowel <b>u</b> became <em>o</em> in unstressed syllables unless the stressed vowel of the word was also <b><font color="#000000">u</font></b>. | |||
</li> | |||
<li> The | |||
</ | |||
<li> | </li><li> The vowel <b>i</b> became <em>e</em> in unstressed syllables unless the stressed vowel of the word was also <b><font color="#000000">i</font></b>. | ||
</ | |||
</li><li> The | </li><li> The mid vowels <b>e o</b> became <em>ʲə ʷə</em> in stressed syllables and a simple <em>ə</em> in unstressed syllables. | ||
</li><li> | </li><li> The diphthongs <b>uj iw</b> both became <em>u</em>. | ||
</li><li> The labialized consonant <b>mʷ</b> became <em>ɣʷ</em> in initial position and <em>ŋʷ</em> medially. | |||
</li><li> The labialized consonants <b>tʷ nʷ sʷ</b> became <em>p m f</em> in initial position and <em>kt ɣʷ ks</em> medially. | |||
</li><li> The labialized consonants <b>kʷ ŋʷ hʷ</b> shifted to <em>p m f</em> in all positions. | |||
</li><li> | </li><li> The palatalized consonant <b>mʲ</b> became <em>ñ</em> in all positions. | ||
</li><li> The palatalized consonants <b>tʲ nʲ sʲ</b> became <em>č ñ š</em> in all positions. | |||
</li><li> | </li><li> The palatalized consonants <b>kʲ ŋʲ hʲ</b> shifted to <em>č ñ š</em> in all positions. | ||
</li><li> | </li><li> <b>ɣ</b> became <em>l</em>. <b>ɣʷ</b> became <em>lʷ</em>. | ||
</li><li> | </li><li> The labialized approximant <b>lʷ</b> became <em>ll</em>. | ||
</li><li> | </li><li> The palatalized consonants <b>kʲ ŋʲ hʲ</b> shifted to <em>č ñ š</em> in all positions. | ||
</li><li> The sequence <b>wu</b> changed to <em>wi</em>. | |||
</li><li> The sequence <b>wu</b> changed to <em>wi</em>. | |||
</li><li> New labialized and palatalized consonants began to form | </li><li> New labialized and palatalized consonants began to form | ||
Line 1,730: | Line 1,597: | ||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="185"></td><td> | <table><tbody><tr><td width="185"></td><td> | ||
| | ||
====Thaoa (2668) to Sakhi (~4500?)==== | |||
Thaoa to Sakhi | |||
<p class="body"> | <p class="body"> | ||
Line 2,098: | Line 1,963: | ||
</p> | </p> | ||
===Gold to Papies (3100)=== | |||
Alternate names:> Pre-Proto-Pabappa; Pre-Pabappa; Pabappic Gold | |||
<p class="body"> | <p class="body"> | ||
Line 2,168: | Line 2,032: | ||
====Papies (3100) to Bābākiam (4100)==== | |||
Alternate names: Proto-Pabappa; Pabappa (in historical texts) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
Line 2,257: | Line 2,121: | ||
Spoken around the year 4100, not only in the city of Bābā but a significant | Spoken around the year 4100, not only in the city of Bābā but a significant | ||
amount of territory away from it in all directions.</li></ol> | amount of territory away from it in all directions.</li></ol> | ||
Bābākiam to Poswa (8700) | |||
===Bābākiam (4100) to Poswa (8700)=== | |||
Alternate names: Ižda Mir, Blop, Bloppabop | |||
NOTE that this section is outdented for prominence. Poswa is a daughter language of Bābākiam, not of Gold. | |||
<ol> | <ol> | ||
Line 2,469: | Line 2,338: | ||
<br><br> | <br><br> | ||
H </td></tr></tbody></table> | |||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="115"></td><td> | <table><tbody><tr><td width="115"></td><td> | ||
<!-- pinna top--> | <!-- pinna top--> | ||
====Bābākiam to Old Tahno (6500)==== | |||
Bābākiam to Old Tahno (6500) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
Line 2,593: | Line 2,442: | ||
<br><br><br> | <br><br><br> | ||
===Bābākiam to Old Pabappa (~6500) ... too early?=== | |||
Alternate names: Pespimbesa | |||
<p class="body"> | <p class="body"> | ||
Line 2,644: | Line 2,492: | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
<p></p></td></tr></tbody></table> | <p></p></td></tr></tbody></table> | ||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="165"></td><td> | <table><tbody><tr><td width="165"></td><td> | ||
| | ||
Line 2,666: | Line 2,510: | ||
====Old Pabappa (6500?) to Pabappa (8700)==== | |||
<p class="body"> | <p class="body"> | ||
Line 2,821: | Line 2,663: | ||
====Middle Pabappa to Wuwa dialect (~8400)===== | |||
Middle Pabappa to Wuwa dialect (~8400) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
<p class="body"> | <p class="body"> | ||
Line 2,916: | Line 2,757: | ||
</p> </td></tr></tbody></table> | </p> </td></tr></tbody></table> | ||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="220"></td><td> | <table><tbody><tr><td width="220"></td><td> | ||
Line 2,932: | Line 2,773: | ||
====Proto-Pupompom to Wawiabi dialect (~8400)==== | |||
Proto-Pupompom to Wawiabi dialect (~8400) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
<p class="body"> | <p class="body"> | ||
Line 3,032: | Line 2,872: | ||
<br>Starts at sound change 41 (ŋ | <br>Starts at sound change 41 (ŋ ----> g)<br><br> | ||
====Classical Poswa to Tuppy (~8400)==== | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
<p class="body"> | <p class="body"> | ||
Line 3,172: | Line 3,011: | ||
====Proto-Pupompom (5547) to Lypelpyp dialect (~8400)==== | |||
Proto-Pupompom (5547) to Lypelpyp dialect (~8400) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
<p class="body"> | <p class="body"> | ||
Line 3,375: | Line 3,213: | ||
<p class="body"> <br> | <p class="body"> <br> | ||
Line 3,393: | Line 3,222: | ||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="115"></td><td> | <table><tbody><tr><td width="115"></td><td> | ||
====(Pre-)Bābākiam to Old Lunila (5700)==== | |||
(Pre-)Bābākiam to Old Lunila (5700) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
<br>Note that this language preserves č. | <br>Note that this language preserves č. | ||
Line 3,484: | Line 3,311: | ||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="185"></td><td> | <table><tbody><tr><td width="185"></td><td> | ||
| | ||
====Khulls to Proto-Lámū-Xaran (5547) ==== | |||
Khulls to Proto-Lámū-Xaran (5547) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
Line 3,527: | Line 3,353: | ||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="220"></td><td> | <table><tbody><tr><td width="220"></td><td> | ||
| | ||
==== Proto-Lámū-Xaran to Proto-Xaran (6618) ==== | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
Xara is the language of the Khulls people who moved deep into Poswob territory and are not Moonshines or Lamuans. | Xara is the language of the Khulls people who moved deep into Poswob territory and are not Moonshines or Lamuans. | ||
Line 3,620: | Line 3,445: | ||
====Ukieipi to Classical Moonshine (6800)==== | |||
Ukieipi to Classical Moonshine (6800) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
Line 4,023: | Line 3,847: | ||
<table><tbody><tr><td width="50"></td><td> | <table><tbody><tr><td width="50"></td><td> | ||
====Rúló to Xykhasl (year 12850 AD)==== | |||
Rúló to Xykhasl (year 12850 AD) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
Line 4,210: | Line 4,033: | ||
===Tapilula to Late Andanese (4178)=== | |||
Tapilula to Late Andanese (4178) | |||
</p> | </p> | ||
Line 4,441: | Line 4,263: | ||
Pre-Proto-Tapilula to POP3 (4000 BC) | ===Pre-Proto-Tapilula to POP3 (4000 BC)=== | ||
</p> | </p> | ||
Line 4,669: | Line 4,491: | ||
<p class="topic"> | <p class="topic"> | ||
Silatibarra to Proto-Outer Poswob (1583) | ===Silatibarra to Proto-Outer Poswob (1583 (wrong date???))=== | ||
</p> | </p> | ||
Line 4,888: | Line 4,710: | ||
</tr></tbody></table> | </tr></tbody></table> | ||
Line 4,908: | Line 4,718: | ||
</td><td valign="top" bgcolor="#ffffff"> | </td><td valign="top" bgcolor="#ffffff"> | ||
</td></tr></tbody></table> | </td></tr></tbody></table> | ||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 18:15, 24 May 2017
Humans on the planet Teppala are confined to a single continent, Rilola, and its offshore islands. Thus all human languages can be traced back to a single starting point, and have many traits in common.
Historical distribution of Teppalan languages
Human civilization on planet Teppala peaked twice: first around 1700-2600AD, and then again around 3500-4200AD. After the second peak, human civilization entered a long decline, the population decreased, and languages with small populations went extinct.
During the peaks of human civilization, it was common for every religion to have its own language. Since religions were tied to political parties, almost every political party also had its own language. This is why many Teppalan languages have unusual names, such as the Gold language and the Moonshine language; these were named after political parties rather than ethnic groups.
Since political parties (and religions) coexisted with rival parties within the same ethnic group's nation, the boundaries of a given language often hinged on tiny differences such as speech registers or a set of unique vocabulary words used only members of a particular political party. When languages such as this coexisted, they tended to evolve in parallel directions, so that mutual intelligibility might persist among a pair of languages for hundreds of years.
Traits common to all Teppalan languages
Traits common to all of the languages on the entire planet throughout all of recorded history are confined to negatives.
- For example, no Teppalan language has or has ever had a definite or indefinite article.
Traits common to most Teppalan languages
Phonology
- Very few Teppalan languages have at any time in history ever gone beyond six vowels, and when there are six vowels, it is always /a e i o u ə/, where the /ə/ vowel may have considerable allophony.
- Dense consonant clusters do not appear, except in some languages where a certain vowel, usually /a/ or /ə/, is not distinguished at the phonemic level from silence. That is, some languages may always pronounce /tk/ as [tək], without the schwa actually being present as a phoneme.
- Open syllables are preferred, and syllables are commonly front-loaded, such that a sequence like /papsa/ is more likely to be pronounced [pa.psa] rather than *[pap.sa].
- On the continent of Rilola, the voiced velar stop /ġ/ (IPA /g/) is rarely used even in languages with a robust series of voiced stops. This is a long-standing trait and crosses language family boundaries. On the islands of Laba, however, /ġ/ is common.
- There are no minimal pairs between a diphthong and a sequence of the same two vowels. Thus diphthongs can be analyzed as allophones of vowel sequences.
- Voiceless obstruents occur more frequently than voiced ones. In some languages, /b/ is the only voiced stop.
- There are often marginal consonant phonemes. These mostly arise from previously existing consonant clusters that were worn down. However, some marginal phonemes arise from sound changes affecting consonants that previously were more common, which survived in only a few phonemic environments. For example, in Khulls voiced stops survived a lenition shift only after a nasal. Later, the nasal sometimes disappeared, meaning that the voiced stops could no longer be analyzed as allophones of voiced fricatives. But they remained rare.
- It is common to have restrictions forbidding certain consonants to appear in certain parts of a word; for example, in Khulls /r/ cannot begin a word. Most languages allow only a small subset of their consonants to appear at the end of a word
Grammar
- Polysynthesis is common, and it is nearly always fusional. It is common to find words with more morphemes than phonemes due to the prevalence of single-phoneme grammatical suffixes that represent two individual morphemes that at an earlier stage of the language were pronounced individually but combined into a new single sound after a sound change.
Gender
- If there is any grammatical gender, feminine words in most semantic fields outnumber masculine ones.
- Grammatical gender, if present, classifies people based on age and sex rather than just sex. The age categories are not firmly defined and can be used metaphorically. There are often several age categories for children, but all adults share just a single age category.
- Many languages have a consonant-based gender system; if not grammaticalized, associated more weakly due to persistence of previously grammaticalized morphemes and contact with nearby languages.
- Mixed gender categories are often present; a man and a woman, referred to as a unit, will take an epicene gender rather than having one gender overrule the other. If there is no epicene, a group containing both males and females will be described with words in one of the feminine genders.
- Gender and animacy, if present, can be inherited by nouns describing syntactically inanimate objects, by borrowing from a parent object. That is, a man's arm will be animate (and masculine), and so will his books or any other possessions.
Structure of words
- Most languages have a fixed word order, with SOV word order by far the most common. Anomalous constructions within SOV languages may require additional marking on certain words, usually those found near the beginning of the sentence.
- Suffixes are nearly universal; infixes are common; prefixes are rare and usually confined to a single part of speech (for example, in Andanese, the only prefixes are the noun classifiers).
- Verbs are generally the longest words in a sentence. Verbs are heavily inflected even in languages where noun inflection is absent or relatively skimpy.
Parts of speech
- There are no adjectives or adverbs. Verbs are used instead of these. In some languages, even the nouns can be analyzed as a subset of the verbs.
- Pronouns play only a minor role in the language, and some languages lack pronouns altogether, instead using nouns and verbs with person markers.
- Person markers on nouns, denoting their possessor, are common. Languages that lose this system often redevelop it from grammatically unrelated words later on.
List of sound changes
<tbody></tbody>
SOUND CHANGES
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