Tarise: Difference between revisions
Line 44: | Line 44: | ||
===Proto-Tarise (~1900) to Capital Territory (3900)=== | ===Proto-Tarise (~1900) to Capital Territory (3900)=== | ||
There might be some deletions of fricatives at some point here, besides the /g/, because if not the fricatives will be the dominant consonant type. | There might be some deletions of fricatives at some point here, besides the /g/, because if not the fricatives will be the dominant consonant type. | ||
#In bisyllabic roots, if the vowel in the second syllable was /i/, then ''u'' in the first syllable changed to ''' uj'''. | #In bisyllabic roots, if the vowel in the second syllable was /i/, then ''u'' in the first syllable changed to ''' uj'''. | ||
#''ai'' came to be prononced /ei/, which (when using the four-vowel syllabary common to the area) was spelled "ɜ" because this vowel had no other use. | #''ai'' came to be prononced /ei/, which (when using the four-vowel syllabary common to the area) was spelled "ɜ" because this vowel had no other use. | ||
#The high tone vowels ''à ì ù'' shifted to '''æ ɪ ʊ'''. The spelling /e/ was also used for the /æ/. NOTE THAT THIS VOWEL DOES NOT BECOME /e/, EXCEPT IN DIPHTHONGS. | #The high tone vowels ''à ì ù'' shifted to '''æ ɪ ʊ'''. The spelling /e/ was also used for the /æ/. NOTE THAT THIS VOWEL DOES NOT BECOME /e/, EXCEPT IN DIPHTHONGS. | ||
#The voiced velar | #The voiced velar fricative ''g '' disappeared after a vowel, changing it into a long vowel. | ||
#All stressed vowels became high-tone; thus tones were eliminated. The tones left no effects on surrounding consonants, and the allophonic affricates that appeared for some fricatives did not survive. | #All stressed vowels became high-tone; thus tones were eliminated. The tones left no effects on surrounding consonants, and the allophonic affricates that appeared for some fricatives did not survive. | ||
#Consonant clusters and final consonants were simplified and made the preceding vowel into a lax vowel. | |||
#Consonant clusters and final consonants | |||
#Double consonants and affricates simplified to singles and also laxed the preceding vowel. | #Double consonants and affricates simplified to singles and also laxed the preceding vowel. | ||
#All unstressed short vowels were reduced to the set /ă ĭ u ə/ . If they had been lax, they also laxed the preceding vowel. | #All unstressed short vowels were reduced to the set /ă ĭ u ə/ . If they had been lax, they also laxed the preceding vowel. | ||
#:NOTE ON POLITICS: This is about 3900 AD *if* the parent language was at 1900 AD. | #:NOTE ON POLITICS: This is about 3900 AD *if* the parent language was at 1900 AD. | ||
===Capital Territory (3900) to Castle Tarise (7950)=== | ===Capital Territory (3900) to Castle Tarise (7950)=== |
Revision as of 12:56, 13 May 2018
Phonology
The phonology of Tarise is fairly conservative, resembling that of the Gold language from which it originated. However, it went through vastly more sound changes than the Khulls branch, so although the superficial appearance is similar, lexical identities are few and the deep structure has been heavily reordered. Being west of Khulls, Tarise shares none of the common traits of the languages spoken to the north and east of Khulls, but shares some traits with Khulls itself.
The consonant inventory (if no dentals) was:
BASIC LABIALIZED Bilabials: p b m f v bʷ mʷ fʷ vʷ w Alveolars: t d n l tʷ dʷ nʷ lʷ Postalveolars: č ǯ y ǯʷ Velars: k ġ ŋ h g ḳ ġʷ ŋʷ hʷ gʷ
Unlike Fojy, the tone of one syllable was not predictable from the syllable before it: two low tones could occur in a row, and there were more than two tones. Thus, in the sound change list below, descriptions like "after a high tone" are defined narrowly, rather than, for example, also applying before a low tone.
Pre-Tarise (1085) to Proto-Tarise (1900)
Target phonology is a fricative inventory of /v g ź f x ś/ + /d z ž t s š/... so twelve frics in all. /p b/ are united with the coda allophones of /h g/, though it is not clear what happens in all circumstances since the /g/ was only found after long vowels. It is possible that /g/ in coda will correspond to gold ʕ and thus not be only after long vowels.
- The voiced fricatives g gʷ shifted to Ø w. However, the fricative allophones remained, and therefore came to also replace original Ø~ʕ. For example, syllable final -u merged with original gʷ, and obtained the velar frication as an allophone after a stressed vowel.
- The inherited fricatives h hʷ became (labio)velars x xʷ.
- The stops p t b d shifted to h s g z unconditionally, with palatalization and labialization both preserved. Preexisting č ǯ merged with the palatalized coronals. hʲ and sʲ were still distinct.
- All unstressed syllables became CV only, with no tones.
- The sequence ʷə shifted to ʷu.
- The vowels ə i shifted to i yi unconditionally.
- The long falling tone vowels ā ī ū became high tone à ì ù unconditionally. They did not acquire glottalization.
Note that labialization is preserved. The consonant inventory at this time was:
Labials: m w Alveolars: s z n l Palatals: y Velars: k ḳ x ŋ (Ø) Postvelars: h g
Thus there were only two proper stops in the language: /k ḳ/. But allophonic stops occurred before voiceless fricatives when following a high tone, thus creating affricates, some of which were indistinct from stops.
There were three vowels: /a i u/, on two tones. A vowel could be followed by /i/ or /u/, even if another consonant was in the coda. (Unless /u/ + conso was removed when labialization was.)
Daughter languages
Proto-Tarise (~1900) to Capital Territory (3900)
There might be some deletions of fricatives at some point here, besides the /g/, because if not the fricatives will be the dominant consonant type.
- In bisyllabic roots, if the vowel in the second syllable was /i/, then u in the first syllable changed to uj.
- ai came to be prononced /ei/, which (when using the four-vowel syllabary common to the area) was spelled "ɜ" because this vowel had no other use.
- The high tone vowels à ì ù shifted to æ ɪ ʊ. The spelling /e/ was also used for the /æ/. NOTE THAT THIS VOWEL DOES NOT BECOME /e/, EXCEPT IN DIPHTHONGS.
- The voiced velar fricative g disappeared after a vowel, changing it into a long vowel.
- All stressed vowels became high-tone; thus tones were eliminated. The tones left no effects on surrounding consonants, and the allophonic affricates that appeared for some fricatives did not survive.
- Consonant clusters and final consonants were simplified and made the preceding vowel into a lax vowel.
- Double consonants and affricates simplified to singles and also laxed the preceding vowel.
- All unstressed short vowels were reduced to the set /ă ĭ u ə/ . If they had been lax, they also laxed the preceding vowel.
- NOTE ON POLITICS: This is about 3900 AD *if* the parent language was at 1900 AD.
Capital Territory (3900) to Castle Tarise (7950)
- After a vowel, sĭ tĭ kĭ ḳĭ changed to š č č č .
- Unaccented long vowels and diphthongs were reduced to the monophthongs a i u .
- All long vowels became short; however, diphthongs such as /ai/ remained.
- All final vowels in bisyllabic roots were deleted. If the vowel deleted was /ĭ/, the vowels in the first syllable changed from a æ ɪ ə to ei ei i ĭ.what is ĭ?
- NOTE ON POLITICS: This is about 4800 AD *if* the parent language was 3900 AD.
- In compound words and certain inflected forms, the second vowel in the word was deleted if the resulting consonant cluster was acceptable ("the Debra shift"). If the second vowel occurred between two labial consonants, the first labial consonant was deleted.
- The lax vowel ʊ shifted to ʉ.
- In clusters, and in word-final position, the labiodental fricatives f v became p b.
- Before front vowels (including ʉ?), the velar stops k ġ were fronted to the postalveolar affricates č ǯ, which were considered single phonemes rather than clusters.
- At the end of a closed syllable the bilabial stop b came to be pronounced as ə, with a common allophone of [w]; however there was no change in the native spelling.
- At the end of a closed syllable the bilabial stop p came to be pronounced as ʔ, however there was no change in the native spelling. That is, the ligatures of vowel + /p/, which are transliterated with grave accents, continued to be used.
- The labiodental fricatives f v became the bilabial stops p b in all positions, although at the end of a few words they disappeared completely. They were spelled with the letters for the "hard" /p b/ because in some writings the letters for the ordinary p b were used for /ʔ ə/.
- Voiced stops became prenasalized after a tense vowel; lax vowels before voiced stops became allophonically tense but did not gain prenasalization.
- The lax/tense distinction in vowels disappeared, leaving vowel quality alone to distinguish them and meaning that glottal stops after certain vowels were no longer pronounced. However, the changes that the earlier system had inflicted on the consonants still remained.
- The old vowel ɪ came to be pronounced as e.
- Unstressed ʉ became a true schwa. The script was now written with the old /ʉ/ series as the inherent vowel (previously it was schwa).
- The low vowel a rounded to o (sometimes [ɔ]; and æ became a. Thus the six vowel system /a e i o u ə/ had emerged.
- Letters with inherent vowels sometimes appeared as the onset of a stressed syllable (mostly in loans, but in a few
native words also). Previously the /u/ ones were pronounced with /w/, but that disappeared, and as it did so the ones with /a/ became velarised and in some cases (especially velars) also labialized.
Proto-Tarise (~1900) to Hawks' Nest Trail
This language is not likely to be the "cold" Tarise.
- The velars k g ŋ x ŋ̀ ḳ palatalized to ć y ń ś ʔń ć before an /i/ on any tone.
- The postalveolars š ž ǯ became true palatals ś y ǵ before an /i/ on any tone.
- In unstressed syllables, remaining u disappeared, forming consonant clusters. A yer-like rule prevented certain clusters from developing, but the epenthetic vowel was /i/, not /u/. Thus the language now distinguished only two vowels (/a i/) in unstressed syllables.
- If two fricatives came together, the first one became a stop. Thus the stops p b t d q were created. (Preexisting ṭ ḍ were dentals.) Because of this rule, the affricate allophones of fricatives that appeared after high tones were reinterpreted as proper sequences. That is, for example, /-àš-/ came to be spelled /-àtš-/. The tone was still phonemic because new clusters had appeared that matched the forms that had previously been allophones of single sounds.
- The glottalized nasals m̀ ṇ̀ ǹ ŋ̀ became p ṭ t k unconditionally.
- Any fricative occurring after a nasal became a stop.
Other info
k˖ k⁺ k₊ k̟
k˖ k⁺ k₊ k̟