Paleo-Pabappa: Difference between revisions
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The lateral /l/ patterned with the nasals, but there was no geminate /r/. Stops could be voiced and lenited to fricatives after a low tone, but the tone was still important since the sonorants could not be distinguished this way. | The lateral /l/ patterned with the nasals, but there was no geminate /r/. Stops could be voiced and lenited to fricatives after a low tone, but the tone was still important since the sonorants could not be distinguished this way. | ||
True phonemic /e o/ could reappear from əi əi, but note that the schwa here is a mid vowel, unlike in Bābākiam. | |||
==Grammar== | ==Grammar== |
Revision as of 20:34, 7 November 2018
Tapilula (0) to Paleo-Pabappa (~3200 AD)
The consonant inventory of Tapilula was
Rounded bilabials: hʷ w Spread bilabials: p m b f (Ø) Alveolars: t n d l Rounded alveolars: tʷ nʷ dʷ Velars: k ḳ ŋ ġ h g
- The aspirated velar stop k became č before the vowel /i/. If another vowel followed, the /i/ disappeared. This happened even if the /i/ was accented.
- When a "velaroid" consonant (/k ḳ ŋ h g l/) followed an accented high tone vowel, the vowel metathesized, leaving a closed syllable.
- A schwa before another vowel in any syllable disappeared. Thus əa əe əi əo əu əə shifted to a e i o u ə. This happened in both open and closed syllables.
- The sequences iu and ui shifted to ə̄.
- The double-vowel sequences aa ee ii oo uu əə shifted to the single vowels a e i o u ə in closed syllables only.
- The sequences ii uu əə (which now occurred only in open syllables) shifted to əi əu ə.
- The remaining double-vowel sequences aa ee oo, which occurred only in open syllables, shifted to the long vowels ā ē ō.
- The sequences ai ei oi merged as ei; the sequences au eu ou merged as ou.
- NOTE ON POLITICS: this is the date of the break with all other languages.
- The mid-vowel sequences eo eə shifted to ee. Meanwhile oe oə became oo. These four sequences were all rare, however, because of shifts further back in time that affected only mid vowels.
- All consonants adjacent to an /u/ in either direction became labialized.
- The sequences ae ao shifted to ai au.
- In absolute initial position, t tʷ >s sʷ.
- In syllable-final position, the voiced velar fricative g disappeared and lengthened the preceding vowel. This often occurred in the second element of a diphthong.
- Vowel sequences in which the second element was high-tone (less common) lengthened the second vowel, thus merging with the ones which had previously been followed by /g/.
- Velar consonants moved up: k ŋ h g > č ň š ž, probably unconditionally.
- q>k.
- The palataloids ž žʷ shifted to r v.
- In absolute final position, š ň > s n.
- In absolute final position, hʷ č> p t.
- The labial fricative f became p word-initially, and v became b everywhere. (/v/ was rare; it is not /w/)
- Frics became stops after a high tone.
- The schwas ə ə̄ changed to u ū unconditionally.
- All labialized consonants change to plain bilabials.
- Voicing distinction disappears entirely. This was actually triggered by a new voicing of stops after low tones, but because this change removed the last remaining environment that could host a minimal pair, there was no longer any phonemic contast.
- NOTE ON POLITICS: This is 1900 AD.
- Before a vowel, the sequences ki ti ni si shifted to č č ň š while li ri shifted to y .
- The sequences ea oa shifted to aa. This was distinct from the /ā/.
- Prevocalic sequences pi mi fi shifted to t n s (with no following glide). Thus the prevocalic glide /j/ was completely eliminated except in isolation.
- Word-final -s disappeared to Ø and lengthened the preceding vowel. This was distinct from a double vowel sequence.
- All remaining e shifted to a new mid central vowel, the schwa ə.
- The sequences ou uo shifted to əu uə.
- All remaining o shifted to a. This includes long and double vowels as well as those in sequences.
- The sequence iy shifted to ī.
- Intervocalic fricatives disappeared: f s š shifted to w Ø y. Word-initial s š became k, which had an allophone of [h]. However, even this [h] disappeared after a low tone, and thus the classifier prefixes came to be silent.
Thus the consonant inventory was
Bilabials: p m w Alveolars: t n l r Palataloids: č ň y Velars: k
and the vowel inventory was /a i u ə/, with a contrast between long and short vowels and high vs low tone. There was an opposition of three syllable types, such as
- pìpa (high tone, single consonant)
- pĭpa (low tone, single consonant)
- pippa (geminate consonant)
for stops, and for nasals there were three:
- pìma (high tone, single consonant)
- pĭma (low tone, single consonant)
- pimma (geminate consonant)
The lateral /l/ patterned with the nasals, but there was no geminate /r/. Stops could be voiced and lenited to fricatives after a low tone, but the tone was still important since the sonorants could not be distinguished this way.
True phonemic /e o/ could reappear from əi əi, but note that the schwa here is a mid vowel, unlike in Bābākiam.
Grammar
Noun classes
Paleo-Pabappa did not have an established syllable order such as that used by Late Andanese.
Paleo-Pabappa retains the single-consonant forms of the CV classifiers, which appear only before stems beginning in vowels. In Proto-Kava and proto-Eastern Subumpamese, these were replaced with reduplicated CVC forms, and in the Gold language, they were replaced with the ordinary CV classifiers but later disappeared entirely.
Animate Group I
- pu: Pregnant women and epicenes; verbs of emotion.
- Becomes p- before vowel-initial stems.
- pi: Adult females; worms.
- Becomes p- before vowel-initial stems and takes epicene verb agreement.
- tə: Adult males; rabbits and hares.
- Becomes p- before vowel-initial stems and takes epicene verb agreement.
Note that the feminine prefix pi- is historically cognate to the m- group below, which by the time of paleo-Pabappa had come to be a category for children rather than women. In fact, the prefix was originally identical with mi- "milk; breast", but underwent a sound change due to being always used as a prefix whereas mi- could also appear in standalone form.
In addition to losing their vowels before vowel stems, these three stems disappear entirely before p-stems on the conditions that:
- The p-stem is not another noun. (For example, one must say pipèpu "her crab", not *pèpu.)
Animate Group II
- ni: Maidens, young girls; certain female body parts; ducklike birds.
- Becomes m- before stems beginning in u- and ń- before other vowel-initial stems.
- mu: Young children; most other birds.
- Becomes m- before vowel-initial stems.; appears as mə- in a few words.
- pe: Crustaceans; sea life.
- Becomes m- before vowel-initial stems.
Animate Group III
Nouns in this group must be padded with one of the human identifier prefixes in order to form disyllabic prefixes.
- pa: Sheep and goats.
- ńe: Snakes.
- hə: Frogs, amphibians.
- Becomes f- before vowel-initial stems.
- li: Turtles.
- la: Mice and rodents.
- ča: Flying insects.
- ke: Cats.
- po: Ants, crawling insects.
- Becomes p- before vowel-initial stems and takes epicene verb agreement.
"Po-" is historically identical to the prefix for pregnant women and epicenes, but was never of the same level on the animacy hierarchy. <---POSSIBLY JUST DELETE THIS ENTIRELY FROM ALL LANGUAGES
These prefixes can also be used to denote the habitats of the animals. e.g. ča = sky, hə = swamp, ke = forest, la & ńe = underground
Inanimate Group I
Most words in this group are words for plants or objects made from plants.
- ši: Some types of trees.
- hə: Corals.
- ti: Flower blossoms.
- Contracts to t- before a vowel.
- ma: Very tall grasses.
- pe: Money; some grasses.
- mu: Fruit; buildings.
- me: Alcohol, soap, and mixed formulas.
- fo: Some types of grass.
- pu: Succulent fruit; grass, clover, small plants; round objects; some trees;
- nə: Claws, sharp objects; certain fruits.
- fu: Wind and air; claws and other hard body parts.
Inanimate Group II
This group contains body parts and certain things typically held close to one's person.
- ti: Teeth.
- Contracts to t- before a vowel.
- ko: Bones.
- ni: Feminine hygiene products.
- i: Edible body parts.
- to: Blood and bodily humors.
- pa: Clothes.
- fo: Some words for clothes.
- mi: Milk, inedible body parts.
The prefix mi- is historically identical with the feminine prefix pi-. The "teeth" prefix ti- is historically homophonous with, but not related to, the "flower blossom" prefix.
Inanimate Group III
This group contains landforms and other objects most usually found in the locative rather than as the agent or patient of a verb.
- ə: Open places.
- o: Furniture and land formations.
- po: Oceanographic formations.
- mu: Fruit; buildings.
- pe: Ocean and sea.
- ča: Tall trees; the sky.
- pi: Water, weather.
- me: Kingdoms and empires.
- pu: Celestial objects.
The prefix ča- "trees; sky" is in fact a single morpheme even going back to the days of Mumba, and not a merger of a velar with a palatal.
Inanimate Group IV
This group contains handheld objects and alienable possessions.
- yo: Handheld objects; coins.
- ši: Certain other handheld objects.
- ri: Some other handheld objects.
- hə: Corals; still other handheld objects.
- ke: Wheels.
- pu: Round objects; arrows, weapons, and handheld tools.
- a: Whips.
The prefix ke- can be used for large circular objects; yo- for small ones, and pu- for spheres.[1]
Uses of noun classes
Note that some noun classes had little use as nouns; for example li- "turtle" was only used in a few words for turtles. Instead, they were productive primarily as verbs, such as "to walk slowly", "to be hard", etc.
Later history of Paleo-Pabappa
Paleo-Pabappa did not evolve into Pabappa. Instead, Paba's people shifted to speaking the Gold language as it was introduced from AlphaLeap, and quickly developed a distinctive dialect of it that ultimately came to be called Pabappa. However, Paleo-Pabappa still survived inside Subumpam, since the two nations of northeastern Subumpam had joined the Subumpamese Union after seceding from Paba. The other Subumpamese people considered Paleo-Pabappa to be just another of the many Subumpamese languages, as it shared similarities with neighboring languages such as Galà and proto-Eastern Subumpamese.
Paleo-Pabappa split into three languages: one for each of the two Pabap nations in Subumpam, and one for people in Paba who had not yet shifted to speaking Gold. However, Subumpam was soon wiped out in a catastrophic war, and Paba's strong national government drove the remnant speakers of Paleo-Pabappa into learning what was to eventually become Pabappa.
- ↑ If coins are round, that is.