Languages of Tarwas: Difference between revisions

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'''Tarwas''' is a nation founded in the year 2144 by '''Tarpabaps''' who had immigrated through Paba.  For more than 5000 years, it had resisted being swallowed up by the empires around it, until finally voluntarily joining [[Pusapom|The Poswob Empire]] around the year 7700.  For the next thousand years after that, it used its strategic location (just east of [[Blop]], the imperial capital) to present itself as an alternate way of life for Poswobs wishing to escape the poor living conditions in Blop and other Poswob cities.  The Poswob Empire refers to its divisions as states, not nations, but most people in Tarwas still consider Tarwas to be an independent nation that merely has signed a mutual assistance pact with the Poswobs.
[[Tarwas]] is a nation founded in the year 2144 by [[Tarpabap people]] who had immigrated through Paba.  For more than 5000 years, it had resisted being swallowed up by the empires around it, until finally voluntarily joining [[Pusapom|The Poswob Empire]] around the year 7700.  For the next thousand years after that, it used its strategic location (just east of [[Blop]], the imperial capital) to present itself as an alternate way of life for Poswobs wishing to escape the poor living conditions in Blop and other Poswob cities.  The Poswob Empire refers to its divisions as states, not nations, but most people in Tarwas still consider Tarwas to be an independent nation that merely has signed a mutual assistance pact with the Poswobs.


==Language==
===Evolution from 1700AD to 3100AD===
The Tarwasta people changed their language many times.  During the peak of their power, they spoke a language of the [[Gold language|Gold]] family.  It was of the same branch as [[Babakiam]], and despite breaking off early (around 2144 AD) it shared the change of /l/ > /w/ that led to Babakiam having no liquid phonemes and beginning Babakiam's transformation into a language that sounded like baby talk.  This also removed the dative case from the lanuggae, since the resulting suffix of /w/ interfered with many other changes.


However, Tarwas also shared many sound changes with [[Khulls]].  These were independent developments, as the Gold language's vowel system happened to be unstable in such a way that a certain series of vowel changes occurred independently in the two languages with only minor differences in detail.  The changes involved included /u ū/ > /o ō/, /ə/ > /u/, /ai əi/ > /ē e/, /au əu/ > /ō ū/.  One minor difference with Khulls is in that Tarwa /aa/ > /ā/ rather than remaining distinct.
;NOTE, IT IS POSSIBLE THAT əu could be /o/ since there are more diphthongs ending in /u/ than there were in Khulls, due to the /l/ > /w/ shift. For example, a common diphthong was /iw/, which never existed in Khulls. /iw/ would almost certainly have changed to /ū/, leaving əu free to change into /o/ (despite /u/ also changing to /o/).


The labialized conosnants became pure labials, also as in BabakiamHowever, these were rare, since this sound change affected only true labialized conosnants, not the far more common sequences of /kw/, etc, that arose when Baba and Khulls both shifted srquences of /kua/, etc, to /kʷa/.
It is quite possible that Tarwas' language forms an independent, early-branching variety from the very beginning, perhaps even earlier than 2100 AD, and survives as such for at least the next 6700 yearsRemember that there were border conflicts with [[Sakhi]].


Tarwa also shared with Khulls the shift of /b d ġ/ > /ʕʷ r g/, though the /ʕʷ/ phoneme came to be spelled as /v/.  This, again, was an independent development, not related to areal transmission from Khulls speakers. Nor was it related to Baba's similar shift, which, on the other hand, soon moved on to complete deletion of all but the labial. That is, Khulls and Tarwa shifted /b d ġ/ to /v r g/ (allowing for spelling difference), whereas Babakiam shifted /b d ġ/ > /v ð g/ and then on to /v 0 0/, losing all but the labial. By this time, the language had already become toneless, unlike Baba.
See [[Tarise]] and [[Tropical Rim]].   [[AlphaLeap#Tribal_warfare_in_the_south]] claims they spoke a TR      language.


Further sound changes included the creation of voiced stops from intervocalic weakening of nasal+stop clusters. The voiceless ejective /ḳ/ came to be spelled /q/, but its voiced version was simply /ġ/, merging with that of the plain /k/.Tones did not affect voicing, however.
yet another possiblity is  [[Paba#Tarpabap_domination]]. showing that they may have kept a Laban language like    [[pejo language]]


Thus, by 3100 AD, the Tarwa language had the consonants


:Labials: /p b m f v w/
These may be called '''Helmet languages'''.  Just to the south of Tarwas, there were many different language families sharin the same land: beside Helmet, there were also Oyster, East Andanic, Creamer, and a few remnants like Tuq, the Repilian aboriginal languages, and the fringes of Moonshine.
:Coronals: /t d n s r/
:Dorsals: /k ġ x g ḳ ʕ/


And the vowels /a e i o u ā ē ī ō ū/ (The local alphabet used ''a i u e o'' as its vowel order, however, due to Andanese influence.)
Note that if Pabahais,  Fern, or both is selected as the root of the Tarwas language family, this means that the Tarwastas were linguistically separate from the Tarpabaps and that Paba would not likely have thought of the two groups as a unit.


High tones caused following fricatives to become affricates; the resulting /kx/ shifted quickly on to /k/, thus filling a gap (*/ki/) that had been in the language for several thousand yearsProbably also /pf bv/ > /p b/.
==Early history==
:''See [[Merar]].''
The settlers of Tarwas were of the ''Pejo'' tribes, tall and dark-skinned, and therefore stood out both the dark-skinned aboriginals and the light-skinned settlers who arrived with themTheir history is intimately linked with that of [[Paba]], because the founders of Tarwas moved through Paba to reach their new homeland.


Note that in general, more than half of all nouns had high tone onf the first syllable, so this will lead to a lot of geminates, many of which must be pushed back out.
However, rather than being a single coordinated migration, the settlers of Tarwas may have been ethnically and culturally diverse, coming from all over the tropics, even if both the Pabaps and the aboriginals considered them to be as one.  The various tribes would have been politically friendly to each other, but may not have merged into a single  culture for quite some time.  This helps explain why early visitors to Tarwas<ref>that is, "Bornovia"</ref> described it as being composed of many tiny colonies rather than being a unitary foreign nation.  Note also that it was sometimes confused with its enemy, Repilia, which may indicate that the war was intermittent and that some Repilians lived peaceably in Tarwas territor.


Note that final ''-k'' (aspirated) changed to ''-š'' and then on to ''-s'' because the high tone sound change had caused the inherited final ''-s'' to become ''-ts'', which soon became ''-t''.
If the Pejo population was culturally separate from the Pabaps the way the Andanese also were, then they would have arrived in Paba already speaking a separate language, presumably the same language that their kin spread into the tropics, meaning it would be yet another branch of the [[Tropical Rim]] family, and not a subfamily of an existing TR branch.  This would require the Pejos (Tarpabaps) to live in Paba for 800 years without learning Paleo-Pabappa, though again, this is no different than the Andanese also doing this.  The question is whether the Tarpabaps truly lived apart from the Pabaps in such a manner.
====Examples of sound changes from Gold to Old Tarwa====


*''tìsi'' "cotton" ---> '''titsi'''
===Possible entrainments===
*''kùsa'' "marble (stone)" ---> '''šotsa'''
The first dark-skinned "Tarpabap" settlers may have spoken [[Paleo-Pabappa]], the same language as the Pabaps at that time, even though the Andanese settlers had maintained their own languageThis implies that they were culturally assimilated in a way that the Andanese were not. At the very least, looking  further back, the two groups could only have spoken languages that diverged from [[Tapilula]] at most 670 years before the first signs of breakup of Paleo-Pabappa.   [[Early history of Paba]] claims that Paba was not founded until 633 AD, meaning that Thaoa and AlphaLeap broke away just 400 years later.
*''ʕătu'' "boil (skin)" ---> '''hato'''
*''ġassa'' (name of a league; see Ikassa) ---> '''žattsa'''
*''kidən'' "to bend over" ---> '''širun'''
*''pàna'' "snail, slug" ---> '''panna'''
*''nĭgʷu'' "fruit, vegetable" ---> '''nivo'''
*''duk'' "flower, blossom" ---> '''ros'''
*''tək'' "gem, crystal" ---> '''tus'''
*''maʕin'' "soap" ---> '''main''' (thus, vowel sequences such as /ai/ reappear)
*''ṁaġin'' "pattern" ---> '''bažin''' (tentative; assumes all syllabic nasals changed into sequences such as /bm/)
*''lăgi'' "backpack, toolbox" ---> '''waži'''
*''piḳlagi'' "purse" ---> '''pipaži''' (assumes kw > kʷ > p; this /kw/ could only occur over morpheme boundariesNote that Babakiam did *not* participate in this shift, and that Tarwa and Baba were connected at the timeIf Tarwa also does not participate, the word remains '''pikwaži'''.)
*''kùgi'' "paper" ---> '''šoži'''


====Notes on culture====
====Nik====
Note that the dark-skinned [[Merar]] people, despite being closely related to the Tarwastas, had never shared their language: the Merari people were "Tarpabaps" who had settled inside Paba and moved from Paba to [[Subumpam]] during the late stages of the [[Vegetable War]]Their language was a dialect of Pabappa which replaced the native Subumpamese but was soon absorbed by standard PabappaThus the Merari never had a proper language of their own.
The '''Nik''' people probably had their own language.  It is possible that they survived long enough as a distinct culture to contribute to the settlement of TarwasThe much later "land of Nik" found in the northwest is unrelatedNevertheless, the Nik became a caste in Pabap society and thus moved throughout the empire rather than remaining along the southwest coast.


====Southwestern  Tip====
The founders of  Tarwas may have been largely new arrivals, culturally separate from the established Tarpabap population, and may therefore have had a language all their own, likely of the '''HP-3'''  family which was represented on the extreme southwestern part of the continent,  in the tropical rainforest.


The use of the phoneme /r/ came to be associated with Tarwas and its physically distinct people; however, Tarwas soon shifted /r/ to /l/, to match its neighbors.
There were several [[Tropical_Rim#Southwestern_Tip_languages|Southwestern Tip]] nations,  and it is likely that no language dominated the others.


====Interaction with Babakiam====
====Pabahais====
The [[Babakiam]] language at this time had a larger consonant inventory than Tarwa, but many of Babakiam's consonants were rare and found mostly intervocalically. As Babakiam's phonology shrank, it became smaller than Tarwa's.  Tarwa at this time had /d v r h/, four phonemes which were present in Babakiam in 3100AD but soon disappeared from Babakiam.  (However, the /r/ was not really present in Babakiam unless it is considered to somehow be /ð/).
Perhaps more likely than Southwestern Tip is [[Tropical_Rim#Pabahais|Pabahais]], an earlier migration that may have merged in with [[Atlam]] during the period when Atlam was independent.  Pabahais and Atlam were located further east and therefore had greater access to the territories that were opening up for settlement.   If Pabahais is a source of migration to Tarwas, it likely had just a single language at the time, because Pabahais' seven languages only split apart from each other much later on.


===Evolution from 3100AD to 4200AD===
====Fern languages====
The year 3100 was roughly at a dividing point for the civilizations of both the Tarwastas and the Pabaps: see [[Lantern_Empire#Relations_with_Tarwas]].  This is the period of time when the light-skinned Lantern people began to colonize the land of the dark-skinned Tarwastas to their east, even as they themselves were being colonized by a league of dark-skinned tribes to their west, the [[Crystals]].  Note that despite their historical connection to Paba, only a subset of the Lantern people spoke Pabappa (then called Babakiam); most had instead adopted the [[Khulls]] language from the Crystals.
Similarly, the [[Tropical_Rim#Tapilula_to_Proto-Fern_.28.7E1400.29|Fern languages]] were spoken further east than Pabahais, and the   Ferns would therefore have even greater access to the woodlands of the north, although they were an isolated population that could not be refreshed by immigration, and therefore may not have been able to dominate other populations who were also migrating into the north.


Tarwa was a fairly soft spoken lanuggae in 3100AD, but over the next thousand years it became even softerThe vowel system changed little during this time; like that of Khulls and Thaoa, it had become stable.  (By contrast, Babakiam had left the parent language's vowel system mostly intact.)  The (aspirated) voiceless stop /k/ shifted to /š/ in most positions, leaving the ejective voiceless stop /ḳ/ free to shift to a plain /k/.  However, the old aspirate remained as /k/ in some positions, particularly clusters in which it was never possible to distinguish the two sounds to begin with.  For example, the cessative aspect infix remained ''-okt-'' rather than shifting to ''*-ošt-''.
The military pressure on their homeland by [[Kxesh]] may have led more Ferns to migrate to Tarwas than would otherwise be expected, and they could have pulled level with Pabahais or even been numerically dominant despite their much weaker positionNote, though, that other naval powers would need to cooperate;  this was during the period where [[Nama]] controlled much of the seacoast, and would not have faciliated the migration if they knew that the migrants were planning to invade Nama.


At about the same time, the voiced stop /ġ/ merged with the voiced fricative /g/ and both shifted to /ž/ in most positions, leaving the language with no voiced velar fricative.  Then, /ʕ/ disappeared or became voiceless, meaning that the lanugage now had a contrast between /x/ and /h/. There was still no /l/.
====Southeastern Kxesh====
An unnamed territory between Atlam (Fernland) and Amade also suffered migration pressure.  This is the easternmost territory that was not part of some larger empire, and thus the easternmost empire whose people would have been enticed to move to Paba and then through Paba into Tarwas.    Its language was more plain than the others, lacking aspirates and the unusual "tropical" consonants like m̄ n̄ ṇ ŋ̄.


==Background==
====Heartland Tarpabap====
The founders of Tarwas had come entirely from the nation of [[Paba]]. Paba was founded by the [[Pabap culture|Pabap]] people, who had originated from an upland area of Laba's largest island called [[Haswaraba]].  The Pabaps were the world's smallest and shortest people, and were the only people in the world that had blonde hair and blue eyes, so they were easy to spot when they traveled to other nations on LabaThe Pabaps had a majestic civilization in the upland forests of Laba, but relatively little coastline and no navy.  Rising sea levels were shrinking the habitats of the nations around them in all directions, and the Pabaps were ill-equipped to defend themselves from invasions even given the advantage of a mountainous habitat.  Thus, while the sea ate away at the territories of the peoples around them, through repeated small-scale invasions the peoples around them ate away at Paba.    
Because the [[Oyster War]] had not yet occurred, the resident Tarpabaps were also interested in moving to TarwasIt is not clear whether they had maintained their own language since ~670 AD (if so, likely a Tropical Rim language), or had learned [[Play_substratum_languages]] to better communicate with the Pabaps they lived among.


Roughly 500 miles to the south of the southernmost Pabap settlements on Laba, the '''Tarpabap''' people lived in the hot rainforests of Laba's equatorial region. The land here was flat and had many coastal indentations, and fish was abundant in the oceanThe Tarpabaps were among the world's tallest people, averaging about two feet taller than the Pabaps.  Like most people in southern Laba, the Tarpabaps had dark skin and dark hair.  The Tarpabaps had a luxurious lifestyle in their tropical homeland, but rapid sea level rise was swallowing their most cherished islands and they had no mountains in their territory to flee to.  The Tarpabaps were not actually a single people, but a collection of tribes that saw each other as cultural allies in many ways, despite their differences of language and religion.
==Tapilula to Proto-Fern (~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 branchesIt also is the only branch of Tapilula besides Thaoa that partly preserves distinctive aspiration, and unlike Thaoa, Proto-Fern's aspiration was reflective of the original state of the language.  


In a cocktail bar in a major city on the east coast of Laba named '''Sàhʷaluŭǯa''',<ref>Pabappa: '''Saspora'''; Poswa: '''Savvyva'''<sup>?</sup></ref> a team of Tarpabap fishermen approached some Pabap traders and bought each of them two drinks of pineapple-flavored liqueurThen they got to talking about the problems of their peoplesThey were able to do this because Sàhʷaluŭǯa was so powerful that its language, [[Tapilula]], had become a second language for the educated class of even the most isolated nations around Sàhʷaluŭǯa in all directionsThey talked about the many people escaping the rising seas by moving to the continent of '''Rilòla'''.  Many Tarpabaps wanted to move to Rilola, but despite their historical skill with building and driving boats, their habitats were entirely on the wrong end of Laba for such a journey because they would need to pass through the sea claims of many other hostile nations on their long journey to the north end of Laba, and none of those nations would let them in.   
Because almost all words with aspirated consonants had only one, there was no Grassmann's Law in this family.  This is why the distribution of aspirates better reflects the inherited situation as compared with Thaoa.
:But Grassmann's law could still be triggered by words with an aspirate and an /h/.  Also, aspiration might move to the stressed syllable, e.g. /pèkʰa/ "salt" could become /pʰèka/.
{{:FERN}}
 
Retention of even a fourth "K" sound, corresponding to original /ḳh/, is possible, although it would need to shift to something else very early on, because otherwise the pronunciation would be the same as /kʰ/.  Note that /kʷʰ/ has a restricted distribution because it does not come from consonant gradation the way the other aspirates do.
 
The aspirates could be removed from the phonology if they are analyzed as clusters, though there are a few consonants that would merge.
 
See [[Tropical Rim|TROPICAL RIM]].
 
;Culture
The languages of the uplands will preserve aspiration better than their relatives who stayed behind in the tropics (if those languages survive).  The aboriginal languages in this region had a vowel inventory of /a i u ə/ and consonant contrasts like th:t s:d nh:n.  That is, fricatives functioned as if they were voiced aspirated  stops.  Even so, it may have been that /s/ is /lh/ and /dh/ corresponds to /r/, with no plain /d/. This was similar to the situation in some early stages of the daughters of Gold.
 
===Proto-Fern (1900) to Tarwas-I===
;Alternate names: '''Ithagàmi'''
 
This language is probably spoken in the northern lowlands.  It will  be the official language of the entire nation, which is led by the northern '''Ithagàmi'''<ref>given as Igotagàmi in dictionary, but e~o~ə analogy was likely still functional</ref> tribe, the largest and most powerful of all the tribes.  There were minorities living in the north, and they had their own languages to some extent, but their lives were run by the Tarwas-I tribe. 
 
#The aspirated nasals ''mh ṇh nh ŋh'' shifted to '''mp ṇṭ nth ŋkh'''. Note the asymmetric retention of aspiration.
#The coronals ''t d n s'' (but not /ṇ ṭ/) palatalize to '''č ǯ ň š''' before an /i/ on any tone.  This was not phonemic.
#The voiced stop ''d'' shifted to '''r'''.
#The voiced aspirates ''bh dh'' shifted to '''b d'''.
#The voiceless aspirate ''ph'' shifted to '''f'''.
#The sequences ''lh'' shifted to '''s'''.
 
This language is nearly identical to the '''Aspire''' language of the tropics, but they were separate for about 700 years and never reunited.  The only shift that did not happen in this language is the loss of   labiovelars.
 
===Proto-Fern (1900) to Tarwas-II===
This language is probably spoken in the southern highlands.  It may have Andanese influenceNote that Andanese still had aspirated nasals, because the shifts to prenasals happened independently in the daughter languagesThus the aspirated nasals  may be preserved here as well.
 
#The ejective ''ḳ'' shifted to '''q'''.  It was not aspirated, although there may have been a rare ''k₄'' sound that would here be shifting to '''qh'''.
 
 
 
 
 
===Proto-Fern (1900) to Tarwas-III===
 
==Tapilula (0) to Proto-Thaoa (1085)==
#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.  Thus, for example, /àli/ > /ail/.  These closed syllables were all high-toned, and are thus written without tone marks. Thus, for example, ''aa'' implies ''àa''.  Later, daughter languages introduced tone contrasts and independent sequences. 
#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 sequences ''ie uo'' shifted to '''i u''' in open syllables only.
#The sequences ''ai ei oi'' merged as '''ei'''; the sequences ''au eu ou'' merged as '''ou'''.   
#The sequences ''ea eə'' shifted to '''ee'''; meanwhile, ''oa oə'' became '''oo'''. Then, ''aə'' shifted to '''aa'''. Thus, the sequences /ee aa oo/ once again appeared in both open and closed syllables. Note, however, that much inherited /ea oa/ had participated in grammatical alternations with /əa/, which had become a simple /a/ by this time, and this is the form that was usually generalized.
#The sequences ''  ia ie io iə'' shifted to '''  ī '''.  Then ''ua ue uo uə'' shifted to '''ū'''.
#In absolute final position, syllable-final ''ŋ'' changed to '''n'''.  (But see below.) 
#Accented vowel-initial syllables gained a pharyngeal  '''ʕ''' as an onset. Then the clusters ''nʕ kʕ'' shifted to '''g ḳ'''.
#After long vowels, all consonants became voiced.  Also, consonants occurring after initial vowels also became voiced.  This created the new consonants '''  v      ǯ''' .  Thus, final ''-h'' in words like hʷīh became '''-g'''.  However, analogy made it so that the change was confined to open syllables in most words.  This sound change did not affect diphthongs.  There was no voiced velar stop, as all four velars simply shifted to fricatives. 
#After initial unstressed /u/, all consonants other than palatals became labialized.    This change extended even to clusters.  Because of the voicing rule, however, all of these consonants were voiced.  ''vʷ'' > '''w'''.
#:''bʷ'' probably also shifted to '''w'''.
#Initial vowels were deleted unless an illegal consonant cluster would have resulted.  Sometimes ''root''-initial vowels were retained due to classifier prefixes.
#All schwas and diphthongs became low tone.
#Labialized consonants lost their labialization when occuring after another labial or labialized consonant.
#After a stressed syllable, intervocalic ''ʕ ʕʷ'' became '''g gʷ'''.  This is due to reanalysis, not a  true sound change.
#The glottal fricatives ''h hʷ'' became velar; there was no spelling change.   
 
The consonant inventory at this stage was:
 
                        BASIC                        LABIALIZED


Many Pabaps also wanted to move to Rilola, because despite the warming climate, the Pabaps still had very poor natural resources, and even what little they had was being wrestled out of their hands by the peoples around them.  But in order to build a navy, they would need to build boats, and their only sea access was in a desert fed by a river which was too rough to be navigable by any kind of boats the Pabaps could build.  Moreover, few Pabaps had any knowledge of how to build a boat.
    
    
===War of the Hills===
Bilabials:            p  b  m  f  v                    mʷ      w 
Although the two peoples had had friendly contacts in the distant past, relations had gone downhill when the Tarpabaps responded to the rising seas by invading uphill towards Pabap territory.   The people who suffered most in this invasion were not the Pabaps, but a third people known as the '''Tima''' who lived in between them.  The Tima responded by invading Pabap territory, but the Pabaps were aware of the situation and laid the blame for the invasion on the Tarpabaps.  Furthermore, the invading Tarpabaps did eventually reach Pabap territory, and set up invasive settlements there.
Alveolars:            t  d  n      l            tʷ  dʷ  nʷ           
Postalveolars:        č  ǯ          y                     
Velars:                k      ŋ  h  g   ḳ                ŋʷ  hʷ  gʷ
 
The vowel inventory was
 
Short vowels:          a e  i  o  u  ə
Long vowels:          ā  ē  ī  ō  ū
Falling diphthongs:      ae ei ao ou
                            əi    əu
 
The long vowels /ā ē ō/ can be spelled '''aa ee oo''', but the high vowels /ī ū/ are usually not, because /i u/ before another vowel would indicate a glide.
This list may have to be cut somewhere in the middle, with the full list applying to just one subbranch and ending around the year 2668.


But the men talking to each other in Sàhʷaluŭǯa figured that if the Pabaps and the Tarpabaps could get along, they could solve each other's problems: the Pabaps would mostly abandon their upland homes, move into Tarpabap territory, and then ride the Tarpabap boats all the way around the coast of Laba in order to reach the small strip of land on Laba's north coast that was under Pabap control.  From here, they could sail to Rilòla.  The Pabaps needed the Tarpabaps for this plan because the Pabaps themselves had almost no boats.  The Tarpabaps needed the Pabaps for this plan because no other nation in the north would let a Tarpabap boat so much as beach on their shores, and a trip from Tarpabap land all the way to Rilola without stopping was impossible.  Moreover, the Pabaps had the advantage of numbers, as they were a rare example of a large united population amidst many smaller, disorganized tribes.  Like sharp teeth in a lion's mouth, these tiny nations were ripping and tearing off pieces of Pabap territory, but none was strong enough to go after the Pabap homeland on their own.<ref>Pabaps spoke of the hypothetical "War of the One-Toothed Lion" if such a war were to happen.</ref>  Thus, no nation contested the Pabap claim to the land in the north, and no one contested their plans to allow Tarpabap boats to station themselves there.
===Proto-Thaoa (1085) to proto-Helmet (2668)===


Thus the Tarpabaps and the Pabaps reached their new homeland using boats owned by the Tarpabap Navy, housed in a port protected by the Pabap army.
Note that final /-h/ did not shift to /-s/ in this branch.


==Foundation of Paba==
#The voiced coronal obstruents ''d ǯ'' merged as '''r'''.
The Pabap government never formally acknowledged the agreement with the Tarpabaps because they were still fighting off Tarpabaps in their southern hills. Few Pabaps in this region believed that it was possible that they could be at war with a people who was offering to settle them in a new home on a faraway continent, and considered the agreement a hoax.  The Tarpabaps were not a united people, however, and they sent diplomats into Pabap territory to explain that this was not a paradox because the Tarpabaps killing Pabaps and the Tarpabaps rescuing Pabaps were two different peopleThis, they said, is why they could not simply call off the invasion to prove that they truly were friendly.
#The sequences ''ae ao'' shifted to  '''ai au'''.
#The labialized obstruents  ''tʷ dʷ gʷ'' shifted to '''pʷ w w'''.
#The velar ejective ''ḳ'' merged to '''k'''.
#The sequences ''č kč  '' merged as '''s'''; preceding vowels retained their tones.
#In word-initial position, the voiced velar fricative ''g'' shifted to '''y'''.
#The labialized nasals ''mʷ nʷ ŋʷ'' merged as '''mʷ'''.
#The voiced stop ''b'' shifted to '''v'''.
#After a high tone, the voiceless fricatives ''hʷ f  h'' shifted to '''kʷ p  k'''.  The /s/ did not shift.
#After a low tone, the voiceless stops ''pʷ p t'' shifted to '''bʷ b d'''.
#After a high tone, the nasals ''mʷ m n ŋ'' became the geminates '''mmʷ mm nn ŋŋ'''.
#Tones were eliminated.
#The sequences ''mpʷ mp nt'' shifted to '''mbʷ mb nd'''.
#The clusters ''kpʷ kp kt kf'' shifted to '''ppʷ pp tt pp'''. Note that there was never a /ks/.
#Any other final ''k'' shifted to '''h''', which adopted previously existing sandhi rules such as /hm/ = [mp].
#The labialized consonants ''kʷ pʷ bʷ mʷ'' shifted to '''p p b m'''.  Then ''w'' shifted to '''v'''.
#The diphthongs ''ai ei əi'' all merged as '''ē'''.  Then ''au ou əu'' merged as '''ō'''Then, the double vowel sequences ''aa ee ii oo uu'' became '''ā ē ī ō ū'''.


Nevertheless, many thousands of Pabaps believed in the informal treaty, and thus moved into Tarpabap territory after the agreement, believing that they were about to start a thousand mile journey from Tarpabap territory back into Pabap territory, specifically the northern port of '''Pubam''', Paba's only seaport, from which they would then set sail to the promised land of Rilola. A smaller number of Pabaps moved directly into Pubam, figuring they could skip both the journey into Tarpabap territory and the likely far more dangerous sea journey back into Pabap territory.
It is not clear if Tarwas branches off in 2144 or if it is refreshed by later settlers.  It is even possible that it branches off around 1400, and that the last shared change is the shift of /mʷ nʷ ŋʷ/ > /mʷ/.   See [[Thaoa]] for convenience.


The Tarpabaps were surprised at the enthusiasm of the Pabaps for the alliance, as they figured a people who stood waist-high against the people whose territory they were moving into would react only with fear rather than eager anticipation to the realization that their fates would be forever bonded together.  The Tarpabap leaders figured that perhaps they were getting not the Pabaps as a whole, but a subset of the Pabaps that was either so fearless or so naive to the possibility of abuse that they had absolutely no understanding of what could potentially happen to them.  The Tarpabaps formed a wing of the police force dedicated solely to protecting the Pabaps from other TarpabapsThey wanted to put the Pabaps in buildings and treat them essentially as children.
==Climate and geography==
===Settlement of Fox Island===
Tarwas has a very simple climate regime.  The main state of Tarwas stretches from 30°N to 35°N and has no perceptible differences in temperature from the north end to the south endThe average temperature in winter is 0°C, in summer it is 20°C, and year-round  the average is 10°CThis is because the expected temperature gain towards the south is exactly compensated for by the smooth upward slope of the land. The same thing occurs to the west in [[Nama]].   
Nevertheless, the Pabaps were not interested in living in Tarpabap territory.  They wanted to get out, and get on boats headed to Pubam so that they could immediately set sail from Pubam and start a new life in RilolaThey mostly had no money and thus could not afford to buy themselves the right to get on board the boats, and therefore had to rely on the generosity of the Tarpabaps all around them in funding their way out. Some Tarpabaps said that because Pabaps were a small, physically delicate people, their natural place was one of servitude to the taller, stronger Tarpabaps.  But the Pabaps knew that power in the alliance was balanced on both sides, and that Tarpabap ships reaching Pubam would not be allowed to continue on to Rilola if the Pabaps aboard claimed that they were being physically abusedTherefore the Tarpabaps allowed Pabaps to board the ships without needing to pay their way on, and on many ships, Pabaps were actually the majority.


When each ship reached Pubam, another group of Pabaps boarded the ship, adding to the Pabaps already on boardConversely, some Tarpabaps actually disembarked, figuring that maybe they didn't need to escape the islands of Laba after all but just needed to start a new life in Pubam or some other part of Pabap territory.  Thus, even while Paba was fighting off Tarpabap invaders in their south, they were soon outnumbered by the Tarpabaps entering them from the north.  On the other hand, the population of most ships sailing towards Rilola was majority Pabap because so many Tarpabaps had changed their minds about where they wanted to move.
Since temperature variation is insignificant from one end of the region to the other, the wildlife and plant life is also similarHowever, the southern end of Tarwas experiences a moderate dry season during the summer, whereas towards the north it is wet all year round.   


The ships were not headed towards Rilola, however, but towards an island about a thousand miles away from Laba, which soon came to be called Fox Island.<ref>Because the Poswa name is '''Vulpes'''. Which means that I need a new name.  Hence why it is not bolded.</ref>  Direct journeys to Rilola had happened in the past, but the parts of Rilola that those journeys had gone to were both very cold and already inhabited.  The Tarpabaps were looking to settle in a warm climate similar to what they had had in their old homeland on the islands of Laba, not a cold climate like what the Pabaps were accustomed to.  Lands like these laid yet a further thousand mile journey away.  Thus, both the Pabaps and the Tarpabaps were undertaking three consecutive thousand-mile journeys to reach their destination.  This was approximately the maximum distance that a boat could travel given the technology of the day.


==Notes==
==Notes==
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[[Category:Teppala]]
[[Category:Teppala]]
[[Category:Macro-Pabap languages]]

Latest revision as of 21:55, 21 July 2022

Tarwas is a nation founded in the year 2144 by Tarpabap people who had immigrated through Paba. For more than 5000 years, it had resisted being swallowed up by the empires around it, until finally voluntarily joining The Poswob Empire around the year 7700. For the next thousand years after that, it used its strategic location (just east of Blop, the imperial capital) to present itself as an alternate way of life for Poswobs wishing to escape the poor living conditions in Blop and other Poswob cities. The Poswob Empire refers to its divisions as states, not nations, but most people in Tarwas still consider Tarwas to be an independent nation that merely has signed a mutual assistance pact with the Poswobs.


It is quite possible that Tarwas' language forms an independent, early-branching variety from the very beginning, perhaps even earlier than 2100 AD, and survives as such for at least the next 6700 years. Remember that there were border conflicts with Sakhi.

See Tarise and Tropical Rim. AlphaLeap#Tribal_warfare_in_the_south claims they spoke a TR language.

yet another possiblity is Paba#Tarpabap_domination. showing that they may have kept a Laban language like pejo language


These may be called Helmet languages. Just to the south of Tarwas, there were many different language families sharin the same land: beside Helmet, there were also Oyster, East Andanic, Creamer, and a few remnants like Tuq, the Repilian aboriginal languages, and the fringes of Moonshine.

Note that if Pabahais, Fern, or both is selected as the root of the Tarwas language family, this means that the Tarwastas were linguistically separate from the Tarpabaps and that Paba would not likely have thought of the two groups as a unit.

Early history

See Merar.

The settlers of Tarwas were of the Pejo tribes, tall and dark-skinned, and therefore stood out both the dark-skinned aboriginals and the light-skinned settlers who arrived with them. Their history is intimately linked with that of Paba, because the founders of Tarwas moved through Paba to reach their new homeland.

However, rather than being a single coordinated migration, the settlers of Tarwas may have been ethnically and culturally diverse, coming from all over the tropics, even if both the Pabaps and the aboriginals considered them to be as one. The various tribes would have been politically friendly to each other, but may not have merged into a single culture for quite some time. This helps explain why early visitors to Tarwas[1] described it as being composed of many tiny colonies rather than being a unitary foreign nation. Note also that it was sometimes confused with its enemy, Repilia, which may indicate that the war was intermittent and that some Repilians lived peaceably in Tarwas territor.

If the Pejo population was culturally separate from the Pabaps the way the Andanese also were, then they would have arrived in Paba already speaking a separate language, presumably the same language that their kin spread into the tropics, meaning it would be yet another branch of the Tropical Rim family, and not a subfamily of an existing TR branch. This would require the Pejos (Tarpabaps) to live in Paba for 800 years without learning Paleo-Pabappa, though again, this is no different than the Andanese also doing this. The question is whether the Tarpabaps truly lived apart from the Pabaps in such a manner.

Possible entrainments

The first dark-skinned "Tarpabap" settlers may have spoken Paleo-Pabappa, the same language as the Pabaps at that time, even though the Andanese settlers had maintained their own language. This implies that they were culturally assimilated in a way that the Andanese were not. At the very least, looking further back, the two groups could only have spoken languages that diverged from Tapilula at most 670 years before the first signs of breakup of Paleo-Pabappa. Early history of Paba claims that Paba was not founded until 633 AD, meaning that Thaoa and AlphaLeap broke away just 400 years later.

Nik

The Nik people probably had their own language. It is possible that they survived long enough as a distinct culture to contribute to the settlement of Tarwas. The much later "land of Nik" found in the northwest is unrelated. Nevertheless, the Nik became a caste in Pabap society and thus moved throughout the empire rather than remaining along the southwest coast.

Southwestern Tip

The founders of Tarwas may have been largely new arrivals, culturally separate from the established Tarpabap population, and may therefore have had a language all their own, likely of the HP-3 family which was represented on the extreme southwestern part of the continent, in the tropical rainforest.

There were several Southwestern Tip nations, and it is likely that no language dominated the others.

Pabahais

Perhaps more likely than Southwestern Tip is Pabahais, an earlier migration that may have merged in with Atlam during the period when Atlam was independent. Pabahais and Atlam were located further east and therefore had greater access to the territories that were opening up for settlement. If Pabahais is a source of migration to Tarwas, it likely had just a single language at the time, because Pabahais' seven languages only split apart from each other much later on.

Fern languages

Similarly, the Fern languages were spoken further east than Pabahais, and the Ferns would therefore have even greater access to the woodlands of the north, although they were an isolated population that could not be refreshed by immigration, and therefore may not have been able to dominate other populations who were also migrating into the north.

The military pressure on their homeland by Kxesh may have led more Ferns to migrate to Tarwas than would otherwise be expected, and they could have pulled level with Pabahais or even been numerically dominant despite their much weaker position. Note, though, that other naval powers would need to cooperate; this was during the period where Nama controlled much of the seacoast, and would not have faciliated the migration if they knew that the migrants were planning to invade Nama.

Southeastern Kxesh

An unnamed territory between Atlam (Fernland) and Amade also suffered migration pressure. This is the easternmost territory that was not part of some larger empire, and thus the easternmost empire whose people would have been enticed to move to Paba and then through Paba into Tarwas. Its language was more plain than the others, lacking aspirates and the unusual "tropical" consonants like m̄ n̄ ṇ ŋ̄.

Heartland Tarpabap

Because the Oyster War had not yet occurred, the resident Tarpabaps were also interested in moving to Tarwas. It is not clear whether they had maintained their own language since ~670 AD (if so, likely a Tropical Rim language), or had learned Play_substratum_languages to better communicate with the Pabaps they lived among.

Tapilula to Proto-Fern (~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, Proto-Fern's aspiration was reflective of the original state of the language.

Because almost all words with aspirated consonants had only one, there was no Grassmann's Law in this family. This is why the distribution of aspirates better reflects the inherited situation as compared with Thaoa.

But Grassmann's law could still be triggered by words with an aspirate and an /h/. Also, aspiration might move to the stressed syllable, e.g. /pèkʰa/ "salt" could become /pʰèka/.

Shared changes

  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.
  5. The sequences pg tg kg shifted to pʰ tʰ kʰ.
  6. 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.
  7. The sequences ṁg ṅg ŋ̇g shifted to ṁb ṅd ŋ̇ġ.
  8. After a high tone, the fricatives f hʷ h shifted to pʰ kʷʰ kʰ.
  9. The labialized nasals tʷ dʷ nʷ shifted to kʷ gʷ ṇ.
  10. Final g disappeared, as in related languages such as Middlesex, but unlike those languages, it did not create a long vowel. Thus, coda àg ăg shifted simply to à ă.
    Note that it could in theory have behaved like /h/ below, which would mean that at least when a voiceless stop was across the preceding vowel, that stop would become aspirated.
  11. Post-tonic aspiration skips leftward to become pretonic, at least when the preceding consonant is a stop. For example, pèkʰa > pʰèka "salt". This also includes any trapped coda h shifting to Ø.
  12. Aspiration in classifier prefixes also skips forward. It is not clear if the aspiration can skip forward twice, such that it would apply in both nouns (which had initial stress) and in verbs (which had final stress). Note that there are some words which would have had initial aspirates from the FIRST shift up above where e.g. tihə --> ti-ʰ-, and these definitely did skip forward.
    IT IS POSSIBLE THAT /g/ ALSO MIGRATED.
  13. Before /u/, the labial fricative f shifted to .
  14. Remaining f shifted to h .

Thus the consonant inventory was

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

Retention of even a fourth "K" sound, corresponding to original /ḳh/, is possible, although it would need to shift to something else very early on, because otherwise the pronunciation would be the same as /kʰ/. Note that /kʷʰ/ has a restricted distribution because it does not come from consonant gradation the way the other aspirates do.

The aspirates could be removed from the phonology if they are analyzed as clusters, though there are a few consonants that would merge.

See TROPICAL RIM.

Culture

The languages of the uplands will preserve aspiration better than their relatives who stayed behind in the tropics (if those languages survive). The aboriginal languages in this region had a vowel inventory of /a i u ə/ and consonant contrasts like th:t s:d nh:n. That is, fricatives functioned as if they were voiced aspirated stops. Even so, it may have been that /s/ is /lh/ and /dh/ corresponds to /r/, with no plain /d/. This was similar to the situation in some early stages of the daughters of Gold.

Proto-Fern (1900) to Tarwas-I

Alternate names
Ithagàmi

This language is probably spoken in the northern lowlands. It will be the official language of the entire nation, which is led by the northern Ithagàmi[2] tribe, the largest and most powerful of all the tribes. There were minorities living in the north, and they had their own languages to some extent, but their lives were run by the Tarwas-I tribe.

  1. The aspirated nasals mh ṇh nh ŋh shifted to mp ṇṭ nth ŋkh. Note the asymmetric retention of aspiration.
  2. The coronals t d n s (but not /ṇ ṭ/) palatalize to č ǯ ň š before an /i/ on any tone. This was not phonemic.
  3. The voiced stop d shifted to r.
  4. The voiced aspirates bh dh shifted to b d.
  5. The voiceless aspirate ph shifted to f.
  6. The sequences lh shifted to s.

This language is nearly identical to the Aspire language of the tropics, but they were separate for about 700 years and never reunited. The only shift that did not happen in this language is the loss of labiovelars.

Proto-Fern (1900) to Tarwas-II

This language is probably spoken in the southern highlands. It may have Andanese influence. Note that Andanese still had aspirated nasals, because the shifts to prenasals happened independently in the daughter languages. Thus the aspirated nasals may be preserved here as well.

  1. The ejective shifted to q. It was not aspirated, although there may have been a rare k₄ sound that would here be shifting to qh.



Proto-Fern (1900) to Tarwas-III

Tapilula (0) to Proto-Thaoa (1085)

  1. 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.
  2. When a "velaroid" consonant (/k ḳ ŋ h g l/) followed an accented high tone vowel, the vowel metathesized, leaving a closed syllable. Thus, for example, /àli/ > /ail/. These closed syllables were all high-toned, and are thus written without tone marks. Thus, for example, aa implies àa. Later, daughter languages introduced tone contrasts and independent sequences.
  3. 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.
  4. The sequences iu and ui shifted to ə̄.
  5. 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.
  6. The sequences ii uu əə (which now occurred only in open syllables) shifted to əi əu ə.
  7. The sequences ie uo shifted to i u in open syllables only.
  8. The sequences ai ei oi merged as ei; the sequences au eu ou merged as ou.
  9. The sequences ea eə shifted to ee; meanwhile, oa oə became oo. Then, shifted to aa. Thus, the sequences /ee aa oo/ once again appeared in both open and closed syllables. Note, however, that much inherited /ea oa/ had participated in grammatical alternations with /əa/, which had become a simple /a/ by this time, and this is the form that was usually generalized.
  10. The sequences ia ie io iə shifted to ī . Then ua ue uo uə shifted to ū.
  11. In absolute final position, syllable-final ŋ changed to n. (But see below.)
  12. Accented vowel-initial syllables gained a pharyngeal ʕ as an onset. Then the clusters nʕ kʕ shifted to g ḳ.
  13. After long vowels, all consonants became voiced. Also, consonants occurring after initial vowels also became voiced. This created the new consonants v ǯ . Thus, final -h in words like hʷīh became -g. However, analogy made it so that the change was confined to open syllables in most words. This sound change did not affect diphthongs. There was no voiced velar stop, as all four velars simply shifted to fricatives.
  14. After initial unstressed /u/, all consonants other than palatals became labialized. This change extended even to clusters. Because of the voicing rule, however, all of these consonants were voiced. > w.
    probably also shifted to w.
  15. Initial vowels were deleted unless an illegal consonant cluster would have resulted. Sometimes root-initial vowels were retained due to classifier prefixes.
  16. All schwas and diphthongs became low tone.
  17. Labialized consonants lost their labialization when occuring after another labial or labialized consonant.
  18. After a stressed syllable, intervocalic ʕ ʕʷ became g gʷ. This is due to reanalysis, not a true sound change.
  19. The glottal fricatives h hʷ became velar; there was no spelling change.


The consonant inventory at this stage 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

The vowel inventory was

Short vowels:          a  e  i  o  u  ə
Long vowels:           ā  ē  ī  ō  ū 
Falling diphthongs:      ae ei ao ou
                            əi    əu

The long vowels /ā ē ō/ can be spelled aa ee oo, but the high vowels /ī ū/ are usually not, because /i u/ before another vowel would indicate a glide. This list may have to be cut somewhere in the middle, with the full list applying to just one subbranch and ending around the year 2668.

Proto-Thaoa (1085) to proto-Helmet (2668)

Note that final /-h/ did not shift to /-s/ in this branch.

  1. The voiced coronal obstruents d ǯ merged as r.
  2. The sequences ae ao shifted to ai au.
  3. The labialized obstruents tʷ dʷ gʷ shifted to pʷ w w.
  4. The velar ejective merged to k.
  5. The sequences č kč merged as s; preceding vowels retained their tones.
  6. In word-initial position, the voiced velar fricative g shifted to y.
  7. The labialized nasals mʷ nʷ ŋʷ merged as .
  8. The voiced stop b shifted to v.
  9. After a high tone, the voiceless fricatives hʷ f h shifted to kʷ p k. The /s/ did not shift.
  10. After a low tone, the voiceless stops pʷ p t shifted to bʷ b d.
  11. After a high tone, the nasals mʷ m n ŋ became the geminates mmʷ mm nn ŋŋ.
  12. Tones were eliminated.
  13. The sequences mpʷ mp nt shifted to mbʷ mb nd.
  14. The clusters kpʷ kp kt kf shifted to ppʷ pp tt pp. Note that there was never a /ks/.
  15. Any other final k shifted to h, which adopted previously existing sandhi rules such as /hm/ = [mp].
  16. The labialized consonants kʷ pʷ bʷ mʷ shifted to p p b m. Then w shifted to v.
  17. The diphthongs ai ei əi all merged as ē. Then au ou əu merged as ō. Then, the double vowel sequences aa ee ii oo uu became ā ē ī ō ū.

It is not clear if Tarwas branches off in 2144 or if it is refreshed by later settlers. It is even possible that it branches off around 1400, and that the last shared change is the shift of /mʷ nʷ ŋʷ/ > /mʷ/. See Thaoa for convenience.

Climate and geography

Tarwas has a very simple climate regime. The main state of Tarwas stretches from 30°N to 35°N and has no perceptible differences in temperature from the north end to the south end. The average temperature in winter is 0°C, in summer it is 20°C, and year-round the average is 10°C. This is because the expected temperature gain towards the south is exactly compensated for by the smooth upward slope of the land. The same thing occurs to the west in Nama.

Since temperature variation is insignificant from one end of the region to the other, the wildlife and plant life is also similar. However, the southern end of Tarwas experiences a moderate dry season during the summer, whereas towards the north it is wet all year round.


Notes

  1. that is, "Bornovia"
  2. given as Igotagàmi in dictionary, but e~o~ə analogy was likely still functional