Tropical Rim: Difference between revisions

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#The voiced alveolar stop ''d'' shifted to '''r''' when not part of a cluster.
#The voiced alveolar stop ''d'' shifted to '''r''' when not part of a cluster.
#The voiceless stops ''p t ḳ'' shifted to '''b d ġ''' before any vowel.
#The voiceless stops ''p t ḳ'' shifted to '''b d ġ''' before any vowel.
#The voiced aspirates ''bʰ dʰ'' shifted to '''f t'''.
#The voiced aspirates ''bʰ dʰ'' shifted to '''f '''.
#The voiceless labials ''pʰ hʷ'' merged as '''f'''.
#The voiceless labials ''pʰ hʷ'' merged as '''f'''.
#:This may lead to analogical replacement of original /hʷ/ with /b/ in many words, as /f/ comes to be seen as the graduated form of /b/.   
#:This may lead to analogical replacement of original /hʷ/ with /b/ in many words, as /f/ comes to be seen as the graduated form of /b/.   
#The lateral sequence ''  lh'' shifted to '''  s'''.  
#The lateral sequence ''  lh'' shifted to '''  s'''.  
#The voiced labiovelar fricative ''gʷ'' shifted to '''ḷ'''.
#The voiced labiovelar fricative ''gʷ'' shifted to '''ḷ'''.
#The voiceless aspirated stop ''tʰ'' shifted to '''t'''.
#The voiceless aspirated stop ''tʰ'' shifted to ''''''.
#All remaining voiceless aspirate sequences merged with their plain voiceless counterparts.  The sequences ''mh nh ŋh'' (there waas probably no /ṇh/) shifted to '''mp nt ŋk''', as in Andanic.  Voiced aspirates became voiceless as well.  
#All remaining voiceless aspirate sequences merged with their plain voiceless counterparts.  The sequences ''mh nh ŋh'' (there waas probably no /ṇh/) shifted to '''mp nt ŋk''', as in Andanic.  Voiced aspirates became voiceless as well.  


Thus the final consonant inventory was  
Thus the final consonant inventory was  


  Labials:       _  _  b  m  w      f
  Labials:               b  m  w      f
  Dentals:                    ṇ  ḷ
  Dentals:                    ṇ  ḷ
  Alveolars:     t      d  n  l  r  s
  Alveolars:         tʰ  d  n  l  r  s
  Palatals:                      y
  Palatals:                      y
  Velars:        k  kʰ  ġ  ŋ  g      h
  Velars:        k  kʰ  ġ  ŋ  g      h

Revision as of 11:44, 17 April 2020

This is a sprachbund comparable to the Lenian languages. It occupies the tropical rainforests of southwestern Rilola, and certain islands which intercept the islands of Lenia. Thus, if Lenia is "Polynesian ", TR may be Melanesian.

TR excludes the aboriginal Star languages and those of the Baeban macrofamily. In fact, TR is cladistically nested within the Lenian languages, even though the cultures were never united. This is because both are sprachbunds uniting people who are related but yet not each other's closest relatives.


The major languages are ordered from east to west: Amade, Atlam, Pabahais, Southwest Tip; and then in order of prominence for the minor langiuages.

Tapilula (0) to Star Empire Amade (1900)

  1. Accented schwas surrendered their accent to the following vowel (not the same as a stress shift, because the tone also changes).
  2. The "labial" vowel ə disappeared, syllabified nearby consonants or turned to i if the nearby consonants were not possible to become syllabic. Note that it never occurred after labialized consonants. Sequences such as /pəh/ collapsed to form aspirated consonants, though these behaved as clusters.
  3. Tautosyllabic vowel sequences òi ài èi converged to ē. This did not affect syllable-straddling words like /tùya/. Likewise, èu àu òu in the same environment converged to ō.
  4. Duplicate vowel sequences àa èe ìi òo ùu shifted to long vowels ā ē ī ō ū. But the same sequences with the opposite tone pattern did not shift.
  5. The sequences ṁg ṅg ŋ̇g shifted to ṁb ṅd ŋ̇ġ.
  6. The velar fricatives g gʷ shifted to Ø w.
  7. The labial stops p b merged as b.
  8. In a closed syllable, the stops b t d shifted to w Ø Ø and lengthened the preceding vowel. New ēw āw ōw merged as ō, while new īw ūw merged as ū.
  9. The sequences bh dh shifted to p t.
  10. The labialized consonants tʷ dʷ nʷ shifted to kʷ v m.
  11. The labial fricative f shifted to h.
  12. The velar ejective shifted to g.
  13. Before a hiatus, the short vowels u i shifted to ʷ y, creating a new set of labialized consonants. However, the palatalized consonants were not distinct from their components.
  14. The sequences tʲ nʲ dʲ lʲ shifted to č ň ž y. Then kʲ ŋʲ hʲ shifted to č ň š. Palatalized labials depalatalized.

Thus the consonant inventory was

Bilabials:        p   m       b   w
Alveolars:        t   n       d   l
Palataloids:      č   ň   š   ž   y
Velars:           k   ŋ   h   g  (Ø)
Labiovelars:      kʷ      hʷ


And the vowels were /a e i o u ā ē ī ō ū/.

NOTE: the writeups below essentially ignore all of the newly created labialized consonants, and it would make sense to try to derive shifts that weed them out as they will be much rarer than the primordial ones. How,ever some shifts, like /ʷi/ > /i/, depend on these new ones.

Star Empire Amade (1900) to proto-Feminine (2643)

The Star party takes control of Amade in the year 2643, so it is likely that the Oysters never completely wiped out the Stars' languages in this region. But note that these were not the aboriginal Star languages, but rather the ones that had been introduced by migrants in the pre-political era.

This branch may be the dialect of the all-female nation of Katalapa. It is also possible that the Crystals re-homogenize Amade's linguistic diversity when they take over, since Crystals needed to travel between nations frequently.

Note that this branch has /ʷi/.

The initial consonant inventory was

                  PLAIN                    LABIALIZED
Bilabials:        p   m       b   v        pʷ  mʷ      bʷ  w
Alveolars:        t   n       d   l        tʷ  nʷ      dʷ  lʷ
Palataloids:      č   ň   š   ž   y         
Velars:           k   ŋ   h   g  (Ø)       kʷ  ŋʷ  hʷ  gʷ

And the vowels were /a e i o u ā ē ī ō ū/.

  1. The voiceless fricatives h hʷ shifted to x h.
  2. The voiced sounds v b bʷ g shifted to f f fʷ x.
  3. The fricatives d dʷ ž shifted to r w y.
  4. Then the postalveolar fricative š shifted to s.
  5. The vowel o shifted to ʷo (phonetically /ʷa/).
  6. The mid front vowel e shifted to i, making palatalization phonemic. Thus only three vowels remained.
  7. The consonant clusters ll nn, which occurred primarily in loanwords, shifted to ḷ ṇ.
  8. The fricative shifted to .
  9. The labialized coronals tʷ nʷ sʷ lʷ shifted to kʷ ṇ hʷ ḷ.
  10. The nasals mʷ ŋʷ shifted to m̄ ŋ̄.

Thus the consonant inventory was

Rounded bilabials:     pʷ      hʷ  w       
Spread bilabials:      p   m   f           m̄
Dentals:                   ṇ       ḷ
Alveolars:             t   n   s   l   r
Palataloids:           č   ň       y
Velars:                k   ŋ   x           ŋ̄
Labiovelars:           kʷ      xʷ  
Postvelars:                    h

Star Empire Amade (1900) to proto-Masculine (2643)

Note that this branch has /ʷi/. The naming is in the intent that this is the language of the masculine Crystal nations, but realistically it is more likely that the Crystals homogenize the languages of the male and female nations because citizens of each traveled to the opposite side to find mates. Two reasons why it is difficult to assign these languages to female and male populations separately are:

  1. The Crystals may not have organized their population that way for nearly a thousand years after the evolution of these two branches of the family.
  2. It is not clear that the Crystals arose in Amade to begin with.

If this is a Crystal language at all, it must have a maturation date much later than 2643.

The initial consonant inventory was

                  PLAIN                    LABIALIZED
Bilabials:        p   m       b   v        pʷ  mʷ      bʷ  w
Alveolars:        t   n       d   l        tʷ  nʷ      dʷ  lʷ
Palataloids:      č   ň   š   ž   y         
Velars:           k   ŋ   h   g  (Ø)       kʷ  ŋʷ  hʷ  gʷ


  1. The front vowels e i shifted to ʲa ʲi.
  2. The mid back vowel o shifted to u.
  3. The voiced sounds d dʷ ž shifted to r w y.
  4. The voiceless fricatives h hʷ shifted to x h.
  5. The consonant clusters ll nn, which occurred primarily in loanwords, shifted to ḷ ṇ.
  6. The sequences tʷ lʷ nʷ shifted to ṭ ḷ ṇ.
  7. The sequence ʷi shifted to i.
    TENTATIVE
  8. The voiceless postalveolar fricative š shifted to s.
  9. The nasals mʷ ŋʷ shifted to m̄ n̄ ŋ̄.
    This language is well to the east of Pabahais, so these may be dummy sounds that later merge into /m/.

Thus the consonant inventory was

Rounded bilabials: pʷ          bʷ  w
Spread bilabials:  p   m       b   v   m̄
Dentals:           ṭ   ṇ           ḷ
Alveolars:         t   n   s   r   l
Palataloids:       č   ň           y
Velars:            k   ŋ   x   g       ŋ̄
Labiovelars:       kʷ          gʷ
Postvelars:                h


It is possible that the palataloids could be analyzed away if assuming /tia ti/ = [ča či] and /ki/ = [ki] (if /ʷi/ > /i/).

The voiceless bilabial stop /p/, and possibly certain other consonants, are very rare in citation forms, appearing only through consonant mutation as in the distantly related Andanic languages. The velar stop /k/ is affected by the same situation as /p/ but only in medial position. The hiatus changes might also be very rare since they, too, were grammatically conditioned. The language could also perform analogy in reverse and delete consonants that are etymologically justified.

United Crystal language

If the Crystals evolve a unified language from the Masculine and Feminine dialects above, it could have a consonant inventory of


Rounded bilabials: pʷ      hʷ  bʷ  w
Spread bilabials:  p   m   f   b   v   m̄
Dentals:           ṭ   ṇ           ḷ
Alveolars:         t   n   s   r   l
Palataloids:       č   ň           y
Velars:            k   ŋ   x   g       ŋ̄
Labiovelars:       kʷ      xʷ  gʷ
Postvelars:                h

And a vowel inventory of /a i u/. The sounds unique to the Masculine side of the divide are /bʷ b v g gʷ ṭ/ and for the Feminine /hʷ f xʷ/. The vowel distribution is also somewhat different, with Masculine likely using a diphthong /ai/ corresponding to no diphthong in Feminine, while Feminine has a diphthong /au/ corresponding to no diphthong in Masculine.

Alternatively, the phonology could collapse to the intersection of the two instead of the union.

A third possibility is that the expanded phonology above is merely the alphabet, and that men and women would give the letters separate pronunciations. Women would devoice men's /bʷ b v g gʷ/ to /hʷ f f x xʷ/ and read their /ṭ/ as /kʷ/. The vowels would be considerably more difficult to align, however, and the script would likely require at least five vowel symbols.

Star Empire Amade (1900) to Buoy (2140)

The Buoy language was a creole language incorporating words from the Lenian languages spoken by some of the Stars' slaves, even though many Buoys were actually of Star descent.

  1. The palatals ň š shifted to n s.
  2. The long vowels ē ō shifted to ī ū.
  3. The vowels e o shifted to i u.

Star Empire Amade to Proto-Raspara (3500)

This language will likely have lots of influence from outside, perhaps mostly from Leaper. The ancestors of the Raspara spent most of their history in Crystal territory, and it is not clear to what extent the Leaper language came to be used in their area. If the Leapers conquered Taryte, then the Raspara would be nearby. If not, they would only receive Leaper influence indirectly.

Early shifts:


  1. The labiovelars pʷ tʷ čʷ kʷ hʷ shifted to p. Then shifted to f. Any gʷ lʷ was barbered as w. The nasals mʷ nʷ ňʷ ŋʷ shifted to m. Then became b.
  2. The voiced alveolar stop d shifted to s. It may have retained a voiced allophone of [z].


Thus the consonant inventory was


Bilabials:        p   m   f   b   w
Alveolars:        t   n   s       l
Palataloids:      č   ň   š   ž   y
Velars:           k   ŋ   h   g  (Ø)


And the vowels were /a e i o u ā ē ī ō ū/.

Area between Amade and Atlam

There is yet another stretch of territory between Amade and Atlam, probably with a low annual rainfall. Kxesh conquered this area sometime after 2200 AD, but they may or may not have driven out the languages spoken there.

The name of this territory is probably NOT Tùdia, since Tudia was further west; there was also a Šŭppa, which may or may not be the same area.

In 2661, Kxesh invaded Amade, and may have begun their invasion from this coastal territory.


  1. The accent pattern involved in certain infixes with accented schwa switched to favor the following vowel. e.g. ăpo "field", apə̀ho "field (possessive) became /ăpo apəhò/.
  2. The "labial" vowel ə disappeared, syllabified nearby consonants or turned to i if the nearby consonants were not possible to become syllabic. Note that it never occurred after labialized consonants. Sequences such as /pəh/ collapsed to form aspirated consonants, though these behaved as clusters.
  3. Tautosyllabic vowel sequences òi ài èi converged to ē. This did not affect syllable-straddling words like /tùya/. Likewise, èu àu òu in the same environment converged to ō.
  4. Duplicate vowel sequences àa èe ìi òo ùu shifted to long vowels ā ē ī ō ū. But the same sequences with the opposite tone pattern did not shift.
  5. The sequences ṁg ṅg ŋ̇g shifted to ṁb ṅd ŋ̇ġ.
  6. The velar fricatives g gʷ shifted to Ø w.
  7. The labialized consonants tʷ dʷ nʷ shifted to kʷ gʷ ŋʷ.
  8. The labial fricative f shifted to h.
  9. The velar ejective shifted to g.
  10. The voiceless stops p t shifted to b d.
  11. The clusters bh dh lh shifted to p t s.

The consonant inventory at this point was

Labials:     p  b  m  w
Coronals:    t  d  n  l  s
Palatals:             y
Velars:      k     ŋ  g  h 
Labiovelars: kʷ    ŋʷ gʷ hʷ

And the vowels /a e i o u/ on three tones.

In an earlier writeup, the /g/'s were stops. The voiceless stops /p t/ were very rare in citation forms, mostly occurring due to consonant gradation in words with /b d/.

Tapilula to Old Atla (~1400)

This family went with no new hiatus at least until ~1400 AD and probably longer, and so is the most conservative of all Tapilula branches. It also is the only branch of Tapilula besides Thaoa that partly preserves distinctive aspiration, and unlike Thaoa, Atla's aspiration was reflective of the original state of the language.

  1. Accented schwas surrendered their accent to the following vowel (not the same as a stress shift, because the tone also changes).
  2. The "labial" vowel ə disappeared, syllabified nearby consonants or turned to i if the nearby consonants were not possible to become syllabic. Note that it never occurred after labialized consonants. Sequences such as /pəh/ collapsed to form aspirated consonants, though these behaved as clusters.
  3. Tautosyllabic vowel sequences òi ài èi converged to ē. This did not affect syllable-straddling words like /tùya/. Likewise, èu àu òu in the same environment converged to ō.
  4. Duplicate vowel sequences àa èe ìi òo ùu shifted to long vowels ā ē ī ō ū. But the same sequences with the opposite tone pattern did not shift.
  5. In remaining instances of hiatus, a spurious g was introduced at least sporadically due to grammatical fluctuations between /g/ and /Ø/. It is not likely that it was introduced in all such cases, however; at least word-initial vowels were preserved.
  6. The sequences ṁg ṅg ŋ̇g shifted to ṁb ṅd ŋ̇ġ.
  7. After a high tone, the fricatives f hʷ shifted to pʰ kʷʰ.
  8. The labialized nasals tʷ dʷ nʷ shifted to kʷ gʷ ṇ.
  9. Before /u/, the labial fricative f shifted to .
  10. Remaining f shifted to h .

Thus the consonant inventory was

Bilabials:       p   pʰ      b   bʰ  m   mʰ  w
Dentals:                             ṇ
Alveolars:       t   tʰ      d   dʰ  n   nʰ  l
Palatals:                                    y
Velars:          k   kʰ  ḳ           ŋ   ŋʰ  g  (Ø)  h   
Labiovelars:     kʷ  kʷʰ                     gʷ      hʷ


Old Atla (1900) to Purple (2800)

The consonant inventory was

Bilabials:       p   pʰ      b   bʰ  m   mʰ  w
Dentals:                             ṇ
Alveolars:       t   tʰ      d   dʰ  n   nʰ  l
Palatals:                                    y
Velars:          k   kʰ  ḳ           ŋ   ŋʰ  g  (Ø)  h   
Labiovelars:     kʷ  kʷʰ                     gʷ      hʷ


  1. The labiovelars kʷ kʷʰ hʷ gʷ w shifted to p pʰ f b Ø unconditionally. Thus, /f v/ mostly occurred before the rounded vowels /o u/. Also, /g/ may be introduced a second time to replace the hiatus, and it may be that [g] becomes the allophone of hiatus after a stressed syllable, or after a high tone.
  2. The voiceless aspirated bilabial stop shifted to f.
  3. All voiceless aspirate sequences merged with their plain voiceless counterparts. The sequences mh nh ŋh (there was probably no /ṇh/) shifted to mp nt ŋk, as in Andanic. Voiced aspirates became voiceless as well.

Old Atla (1900) to Red Tide (2800)

The consonant inventory was

Bilabials:       p   pʰ      b   bʰ  m   mʰ  w
Dentals:                             ṇ
Alveolars:       t   tʰ      d   dʰ  n   nʰ  l        
Palatals:                                    y
Velars:          k   kʰ  ḳ           ŋ   ŋʰ  g  (Ø)  h   
Labiovelars:     kʷ  kʷʰ                     gʷ      hʷ


  1. The velars k ḳ ŋ h g shifted to t t n s z before an /i/ on any tone.
    It is possible that this should be /ṇ/. The /z/ is problematic.
  2. The labiovelars kʷ hʷ gʷ shifted to k h g unconditionally.
  3. The sequence lh shifted to s.
  4. All voiceless aspirate sequences merged with their plain voiceless counterparts. The sequences mh nh ŋh (there waas probably no /ṇh/) shifted to mp nt ŋk, as in Andanic. Voiced aspirates became voiceless as well.

The coronals /t d n s z/, but not /ṇ/, are all palatalized before any /i/. No other sounds palatalize before /i/. The fricative /z/ might occur *only* before /i/ unless a hiatus shift collapses vowel sequences like /ia/.

Old Atla (1900) to Clementine (2800)

The consonant inventory was

Bilabials:       p   pʰ      b   bʰ  m   mʰ  w
Dentals:                             ṇ
Alveolars:       t   tʰ      d   dʰ  n   nʰ  l
Palatals:                                    y
Velars:          k   kʰ  ḳ           ŋ   ŋʰ  g  (Ø)  h   
Labiovelars:     kʷ  kʷʰ                     gʷ      hʷ
  1. The voiced alveolar stop d shifted to r when not part of a cluster.
  2. The voiceless stops p t ḳ shifted to b d ġ before any vowel.
  3. The voiced aspirates bʰ dʰ shifted to f tʰ.
  4. The voiceless labials pʰ hʷ merged as f.
    This may lead to analogical replacement of original /hʷ/ with /b/ in many words, as /f/ comes to be seen as the graduated form of /b/.
  5. The lateral sequence lh shifted to s.
  6. The voiced labiovelar fricative shifted to .
  7. The voiceless aspirated stop shifted to .
  8. All remaining voiceless aspirate sequences merged with their plain voiceless counterparts. The sequences mh nh ŋh (there waas probably no /ṇh/) shifted to mp nt ŋk, as in Andanic. Voiced aspirates became voiceless as well.

Thus the final consonant inventory was

Labials:                b   m   w       f
Dentals:                    ṇ   ḷ
Alveolars:          tʰ  d   n   l   r   s
Palatals:                       y
Velars:         k   kʰ  ġ   ŋ   g       h
Labiovelars:    kʷ  kʷʰ

The labiovelars could shift to /p pʰ/.

Old Atla (1900) to Aspire (2800)

The consonant inventory was

Bilabials:       p   pʰ      b   bʰ  m   mʰ  w
Dentals:                             ṇ
Alveolars:       t   tʰ      d   dʰ  n   nʰ  l
Palatals:                                    y
Velars:          k   kʰ  ḳ           ŋ   ŋʰ  g  (Ø)  h   
Labiovelars:     kʷ  kʷʰ                     gʷ      hʷ

Unlike all other branches of the family, aspiration came to function as a distinctive phonation type rather than just being a cluster of a consonant plus /h/.

It may make sense to spell the aspiration with a full-size /h/, since there was no contrast between the aspirates and sequences of a plain consonant plus /h/.

  1. The sequences mh nh ŋh (there waas probably no /ṇh/) shifted to mp ntʰ ŋkʰ, but the aspirated stops remained as such. Note the lack of aspiration on /mp/.
  2. The labiovelars kʷ gʷ hʷ shifted to k w f.
  3. The sequence lh shifted to s.
  4. The voiceless aspirated bilabial stop shifted to f.
    This may lead to analogical replacement of original /hʷ/ with /p/ in a large number of words.
  5. The alveolar stop d shifted to r when not part of a cluster. /dʰ/ remained.
  6. The voiced aspirates bʰ dʰ shifted to b d. This ended the consonant gradation involving /b/, because unlike other languages of the family, there was never a b~p alternation to take its place. However, if the /w/ by this stage is only weakly rounded, it is possible that /b/ > /w/ and thus the alternation is preserved.

Thus the consonant inventory was

Bilabials:       p           b   m   w   f
Dentals:                         ṇ
Alveolars:       t   tʰ      d   n   l   s   r     
Palatals:                            y   
Velars:          k   kʰ  ḳ       ŋ   g   h  

There is probably no shift of /tʰ kʰ/ > /s x/, and the language is primarily CV, so fricative allophones are unlikely as well. Note that the voiced and voiceless aspirates effectively evolve in opposite directions: the voiceless aspirates become voiceless fricatives (at least one of them), but the voiced plain stops become voiced fricatives.

It is highly possible that there are no vowel shifts at all, and this may be true of other Atla languages as well.

Shared characteristics

The Atla languages were very conservative. Their grammar resembled the Andanic branch, even though Andanic was not closely related. This was simply because Andanic was also very conservative.

There were some unetymological changes, such as /hʷ/ > /p/ or /hʷ/ > /b/, due to analogy resulting from consonant gradations. Thus, some words arrive with unexpected forms, and there is no pattern to which words change and which do not.

It is possible that all languages develop palatalization of coronals before any /i/. It could be said that velars also palatalize, but it never merges the velars with the coronal series.

Culture of Atlam

It is not clear what happened to Atlam in the period after 2200 AD. It is possible that Kxesh conquered all of Atlam, not just the eastern part where they had previously been close to Amade. It is probably no longer independent by the time of the founding of the Oyster Empire.

Pabahais

These are the languages spoken east of HP-3 ("Green Crab" etc) and west of Atlam. It is possible that the two groups butt right up on each other and that this section simply does not exist.[1]

It is unlikely that the migrants would (separately) conquer both Atlam and the Crab zone, and yet leave the area in between to the aboriginals. Thus it is likely that the migrants also settled the land in between, either cooperatively (as they were ambivalent to the politics of the wider world), or in competition with each other.

Pabahais may be the unorganized territory referred to as Tùdia in Star Empire or Gold Empire, and if so, it would likely be part of Atlam's sphere of influence rather than the Crabs. (There is also a second unorganized territory not given a name.) On the other hand, if the western migrants were able to become Oysters when they moved to Kxesh, perhaps they also became part of the Gold Empire by moving to it. Even the other Gold people would have had difficulty telling the two groups of migrants apart, as they had similar appearance and similar languages, though perhaps not similar lifestyles (one ocean-based and the other hunting-based).

Vowel hiatus, deriving from primordial /g/ > /Ø/, is probably still very frequent and may shift to something else.

Pabahais never developed consonant gradation.

There could be as many as seven Pabahais languages ... the world map shows parts of three separate nations, with seven subnational entities between them, and it is likely that these would be genuine tribal divisions rather than jurisdictional divisions within a tribe at least when they were each created. But note that the date of maturation of Pabahais is quite late, around 2100 AD, and that Pabahais speakers were settling in and wresting control of preexisting aboriginal nations from the original inhabitants. Thus it is not necessary for there to be a separate language for each original nation.

Pre-independence shifts

These sound changes are not transcluded and so may fall out of date. See Hipatal.


  1. The high central vowel ə shifted to match the next vowel in the word. This also included the labialization of the initial consonant; thus, for example, /təpʷu/ > /tʷupʷu/.
  2. The velar fricatives g h shifted to Ø ḥ unconditionally.
  3. The voiceless aspirated velar stop k shifted to h unconditionally. Ejectives and labialized forms were unaffected by this change.
  4. The labialized alveolars lʷ tʷ nʷ ndʷ shifted to w kʷ m mm.
  5. The vowel o shifted to a.
  6. The prenasalized labial stops mbʷ mb merged as mm.
  7. The prenasalized sequence nd shifted to nn.
  8. The labial stops p pʷ b bʷ all merged as b. This includes the creation of /mb/ from earlier /mp mpʷ/.
  9. The voiceless alveolar stop t shifted to d.

Early independent changes

These are the changes that occurred after Hipatal split and the settlers reached Pabahais.

  1. The velar stops ḳ kʷ shifted to t k.
  2. The geminate nasals mm nn came to be spelled m̄ n̄.
  3. The voiceless velar fricative became voiced to g.
  4. The voiceless velar stop k shifted to t before any /e i/. Note that it was already rare in this position. A similar change may have affected /g h/, but it is not clear that it would be phonemically significant.
  5. The cluster mb came to be spelled .

Pabahais (~2100) to ????

This assumes that Pabahais either derives from HP-3 or is an early-branching variety of it that would thus need to derive from Hipatal. Even if it does branch early, the last few sound shifts in HP-3 were likely to have occurred in both branches of the family as they involved filling gaps in the phonology. This means that they could also be interleaved with other unrelated shifts.

The front vowels /e i/ probably palatalized any preceding consonants.

The consonant inventory was

Labials:          b   m   m̄   w       b̲
Alveolars:    t   d   n   n̄   l
Palatals:                     y
Velars:       k       ŋ   ŋ̄   g   h

The vowel inventory may have been /a i u e/ or /a i u ə/.

  1. The voiced stops b d shift to v r unconditionally.
  2. The fortis voiced stop shifted to b.
  3. The fortis nasal shifted to .
  4. The vowel sequences uà uì uù shifted to ʷò ʷì ʷù.
    /e/ participates too if it exists.
  5. The vowel sequences ià iù shifted to ʲè ʲì.
    Remember that other vowel sequences must also be eliminated, perhaps by creating more long vowels.
  6. The labialized sequences lʷ rʷ gʷ shifted to w v.
  7. The voiceless labialized alveolar stop shifted to .
  8. The voiced velar fricative g disappeared to Ø unconditionally.
  9. Labialization was eliminated, thus phonemicizing a new /o/ vowel. (It is irrelevant whether /o/ in hiatus was still preceded by a [w] or not.)

Thus the final consonant inventory was

Labials:        b   m       v           m̄
Alveolars:      t   n   ṇ   l   r
Velars:         k   ŋ               h   ŋ̄

Since /te ti/ are [če či], all palatal sounds may simply be spelled as /ti/ + vowel, etc. Thus they are not listed here. It could also be argued that the vowel system is something like /a o u ye yi/. However, note that there is a contrast between /ki/ and /či/ which would require the separation of /i/ and /ʲi/ if not for the fact that /či/ is analyzed as /ti/ instead of /kʲi/.

Voicing is not distinctive for any sounds, but the bilabial stop b is characteristically voiced while the other stops are voiceless. It is likely that they spelled their words using the glyphs for /p/, but languages which made a distinction would borrow Pabahais words with /b/ for the bilabial stop and /t k/ for the other two stops.

The fortis nasals /m̄ ŋ̄/ are unlikely to survive as such.

The syllabic nasals may have persisted throughout all this time. But since they were always analyzed as vowels, the language is entirely CV and can be written in a syllabary with less than 100 glyphs, depending on how vowel length is spelled and whether separate signs exist for each of the consonants combined with each of the syllabic nasals.

Late Pabahais to Obstacle Course

The starting time here may be around 3300 AD, very late compared to the surrounding languages. It may be that this is a second wave of expansion after the collapse of the Oyster Empire.

Labials:        b   m       v           m̄
Alveolars:      t   n   ṇ   l   r
Velars:         k   ŋ               h   ŋ̄

  1. The voiced labial sounds b v shifted to p b.

Late Pabahais to She Fell Asleep

Labials:        b   m       v           m̄
Alveolars:      t   n   ṇ   l   r
Velars:         k   ŋ               h   ŋ̄

Note that /v/ is much more common than /b/.

  1. The voiced labial fricative v shifted to b, primarily an approximant but with a stop allophone at least word-initially.

Late Pabahais to Monarchy

Labials:        b   m       v           m̄
Alveolars:      t   n   ṇ   l   r
Velars:         k   ŋ               h   ŋ̄
  1. The voiceless velar fricative h shifted to s when bordering an /i/ in either direction.
    If the language still has classifiers, this shift could lead to free variation in word-initial position.
  2. The voiced labial fricative v shifted to g.

Southwestern Tip languages

See Hipatal#HP-3.

If these languages correspond directly to the nations west of Kxesh, Atlam, and Pabahais, the maximum number of languages is five. Their territories would be somewhat larger than those of Atlam and Pabahais, perhaps explainable by a drier climate.

The consonant inventory was

Labials:          b   m   m̄   w
Alveolars:    t   d   n   n̄   l
Palatals:                     y
Velars:       k       ŋ   ŋ̄   g   h

Culture

It is possible that the Blue Oysters settled in the area that much later on was home to the TCT campground for orphans. But survival of the language for such a long period of time in an empire which enforced monolingualism is unlikely. If there is any survival of the language here, it must be due to a second wave of refugees who fled to the area after the Oyster government became weaker.

HP-3 (~2600) to Green Crab

The language names of this section and below are temporary, patterned after Blue Oyster, of which at least the Oyster part of the name is canonical. It is not clear where this language is spoken other than that it is not in the Oysters' territory, which was politically united.

The consonant inventory was

Labials:          b   m   m̄   w       b̲
Alveolars:    t   d   n   n̄   l
Palatals:                     y
Velars:       k       ŋ   ŋ̄   g   h
  1. The voiced stop became a voiced velar stop ġ.
  2. The nasals m̄ n̄ ŋ̄ shifted to m ṇ ŋ.
    Either /n/ or /ṇ/ might later shift to /r/ at least conditionally; this would prevent /d/ from doing so.

The consonant inventory thus became

Labials:          b   m       w
Alveolars:    t   d   n   ṇ   l
Palatals:                     y
Velars:       k   ġ   ŋ       g   h
Culture

Even if the Blue Oyster language detailed above dies out quickly, this language should survive, because the Green Crab settlers moved to an area far out of reach of the Oysters. The Green Crab territory was a rainforest that favored small, independent settlements, and was difficult to control from outside. The Oysters likely held some control over the surrounding seas, but this too would disappear if the Oysters were to ever break ties with the ancestors of the Green Crab colonists (that is, the HP-3 settlers).

Pejo

see pejo language.


Pre-Tarise (1085) to Proto-Tarise (1900)

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.

NOTE: This will need to be reworked to start with a six-vowel inventory instead of four. It may share some changes with Gold due to geographical proximity.

The consonant inventory was:

                       BASIC                             LABIALIZED  
Bilabials:             p   b   m   f   v                     mʷ      w   
Alveolars:             t   d   n       l             tʷ  dʷ  nʷ           
Postalveolars:         č   ǯ           y                       
Velars:                k       ŋ   h   g   ḳ                 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.

Note that the inherited fricatives /h hʷ/ are velars, as in Khulls, and 're spelled with x.

  1. 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.
  2. 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. xʲ , hʲ, and sʲ were still distinct.
  3. All unstressed syllables became CV only, with no tones.
  4. The sequence ʷə shifted to ʷu.
  5. The vowels ə i shifted to i yi unconditionally.
  6. 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       

But consonantal allophony was very powerful, even alternating between stop and fricative realizations of /s z/.

SEE Tarise for remainder of sound changes.

Thus there were only two proper stops in the language: /k ḳ/. The fricatives /s z/ preserved allophones [t d] when before [a] and not after a closed syllable, but there is still no [ti] or [tu] in any environment. Likewise, the velars /k ḳ x/ were allophonically uvular before [a], palatal before [i], and true velar before [u]. However, this uvular opposition was not significant because in most cases the contreasast wias wth kʷ not k.

The inherited /ki/ gap is filled by the shift of /kə/ > /ki/; primordial /ki/ by this time had shifted to /sʲi/.

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.

The verb markers for past tense were ki/xi/hyi/syi for 1,2,♀️,♂️. Those are for weak verbs. Passives are xi xi myi xyi zyi, where the fifth is epicene...that is, epicene was only distinct for passive verbs and in some daughters may replace the masculine. a variant masc replces both /yi/ withj /i/.


              PAST TENSE
              ACTIVE       PASSIVE
1st person     -ki         (-xi)
2nd person     -xi         (-xi)
Feminine  ♀️    -hyi         -myi
Masculine ♂️    -si~-syi     -xyi
Epicene   ♁                 -zyi

languages of Gekira

bait language

The consonant inventory 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
  1. Accented schwas surrendered their accent to the following vowel (not the same as a stress shift, because the tone also changes).
  2. The "labial" vowel ə disappeared, syllabified nearby consonants or turned to i if the nearby consonants were not possible to become syllabic. Note that it never occurred after labialized consonants. Sequences such as /pəh/ collapsed to form aspirated consonants, though these behaved as clusters.
  3. Tautosyllabic vowel sequences òi ài èi converged to ē. This did not affect syllable-straddling words like /tùya/. Likewise, èu àu òu in the same environment converged to ō.
  4. Duplicate vowel sequences àa èe ìi òo ùu shifted to long vowels ā ē ī ō ū. But the same sequences with the opposite tone pattern did not shift.
  5. The sequences ṁg ṅg ŋ̇g shifted to ṁb ṅd ŋ̇ġ.

1085 to Pēles

See Lenian languages.

This language is the only one in the family that is spoken by a Lenian tribe. Most people did not realize its identity and grouped it with Subumpamese.


Geography and climate

All TR zones are either tropical rainforests or deserts on the border zones of other TR cultures. The northern limit was 31N, but this was reached very late and was not the occupying army's base of power. Other Tropical Rim cultures stayed south of 18N.

Shared culture and history

The Tropical Rim tribes are of diverse appearance due to their mixed ancestry.

Gold Empire

Only a few blonde Lenian people moved to this area as ordinary citizens; most Lenians in the tropics were either slaves or traders. However, sometime around 2400, a Lenian army arrived in Lobexon, an area northeast of the Tropical Rim, and slaughtered the many dark-skinned people they found there. Having won their war, they declared themselves Oysters and moved into the tropics to extend their war. They found the tribes in the tropics much hardier than their earlier adversaries, and in the end the two sides declared peace and the Lenian Oysters absorbed the tropical tribes into their empire.

Oyster Empire

The Oyster Empire contained the Tropical Rim countries and some much colder ones; internal migration within the Empire led to an increase in diversity, although the Oyster War, beginning as an ideological conflict, quickly turned into a racial war, and the Lenian Oysters fled to safety as their empire collapsed. At first, the apparent winner of the war was AlphaLeap, but unexpected events delivered the greatest gains in power to the Merari tribes who had immigrated from Paba, and the Leapers focused their attention on holding the equatorial zone.

Later history

In later years, the diversity of the population increased once more. The Crystals conquered much of the tropics and soon restructured the population so that national borders no longer corresponded to tribal identities; to some, it seemed that the Crystals' nations had more in common with corporations than with traditional nations. Leaper-controlled[2] Taryte nearly came to have a Lenian majority, and people of mixed Lenian-Merari ancestry came to dominate the areas eastward of Taryte (though this area had not been traditionally considered part of the Tropical Rim). However, the focus of civilization had by this time shifted far to the north, and little economic activity took place in the tropics.

In 4162, the Firestone army invaded Amade and, with assistance from AlphaLeap, began exploiting the native population. The Firestones outnumbered the native Crystals by more than five to one, and quickly suppressed the Crystals' languages and culture. In just two years, Amade became a Firestone nation, and the Crystals never retook it.

Note, it is possible that the entity referred to as Amade here also includes Taryte, and perhaps Atlam and parts of Kxesh. Tarise last appears in history in 3957 as they were losing a war against Dreamland, so it is possible that they were swallowed up. This would not mean that Amade conquered Taryte, just that a single geographical name came to be used for the many defeated tropical nations.

This is important because the Firestones' invasion was successful, and if it included these other territories, it would mean that a large area of the tropics no longer has a dark-skinned majority. The Firestones may have been as many as 150,000 people, given that they were 7% of the population in Anzan and that Anzan's population was close to two million at its peak. Play speakers in total were more than one third of the population of the world. Thus the Firestones would have completely dominated the population of the areas they settled. Assuming they make peace with their victims and slowly mingle, they would become somewhat darker over time, but still stand out from their neighbors to the west. Even 4,500 years on, the population of the area would likely change little in appearance.

Linguistic characteristics

Most Tropical Rim languages were grammatically and phonologically conservative and thus showed ample evidence of their relationships. The most conservative languages were those of the Atlam branch, which happened to also be the area with the warmest and wettest climate, as it was closest to the Equator. Thus Atlam was the area from which the characteristics of the Tropical Rim languages seemed to radiate from.

The dominant syllable type is CV, and languages that allow coda consonants only allow certain ones. Voiced stops are used more frequently in TR languages than in most other languages, and some languages lack /p/ or /t/ or both. Syllabic nasals are often preserved, and those languages which do not retain the syllabic nasals often have a series of fortis nasal consonants which reflect the original syllabic nasals. This is shared with Hipatal.

Notes

  1. source of name is #4838
  2. tentative; see Taryte#Relations in the tropics.