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===Gold to Papies (3100)===
===Gold (1900) to Play  (4100)===
Alternate names: '''Pre-Proto-Pabappa; Pre-Pabappa; Pabappic Gold'''  
The Play language evolved from the '''Soft Hands''' dialect of Gold, also known as '''Wolf in Wool''', '''Broken Shields''', and perhaps at least one other name.  It drove out the Lazy Palms language and took relatively few loanwords. There were also several other languages spoken in this territory, including one language spoken by Star immigrants, probably a branch of [[Amade]]. 


<p class="body">
Wolf in Wool had not yet evolved its characteristic sound, so the relative scarcity of loanwords was not due to the acoustics of the language, but rather a cultural identification with the new language being imported from overseas.  Any loans that were taken in had /e o/ shifting to /ə/ for the entire time period of this language, though /ē ō/ may have been borrowed as /əi əu/ or /ai au/ or either.
Ukieipi was the language spoken in the city of Beni-Iubaia (earlier
Iūni-Iubāia) around 8000 BC. It evolved into a language called Papies
within about 1000 years, and then further into Babakiam by 6000 BC. <br>
</p>


#Sequences like /ʕaʕ/, /ʕiʕ/, etc. lost the first /ʕ/ regardless of whether it was in the same syllable or not(Possibly move this back even into Gold.)
#At the end of a syllable, the pharyngeal fricative ''ʕ'' disappeared and changed the previous vowel to a high tone. It also voiced the following consonant.   
#At the end of a syllable, <b> /ʕ/</b> disappeared and changed the previous vowel to a high tone. It also voiced the following consonant. No new consonants arose from this change, but some voiced ones now became less restricted in their distribution.
#Syllable-final ''k ḳ ŋ'' changed to '''kʷ ḳʷ ŋʷ'''.
#The bilabial approximant <b>w</b> changed to <em>ʕʷ</em> (also spelled "v") before a vowel. Note that words like "kua" were still /kua/ rather than /kwa/ and thus did not undergo this change.
#Feeding on the above change, in compounds, if the  final consonant was one of /kʷ ḳʷ/ and the first consonant of the next morpheme was one of the velars ''k ḳ h ŋ'', it also became labiovelar. Thus for example /kk/ > /kʷkʷ/ or /kʷ:/. It did not happen for other consonants. Prenasals  did not shift; later, the cluster /ŋʷk/ becomes /mk/, which is pronounced as spelled but later becomes [ŋk], [mpt], etc depending on dialect.
#Then <b>l lʷ</b> both became <em>w</em> (not ʕʷ) in all positions although it retained a rhotic allophone.  /lʷ/ was very rare, occurring only from word-initial collapse of an earlier /ul-/ sequence.
#In initial position, the labialized coronals ''tʷ dʷ nʷ'' shifted to '''t d n'''. Elsewhere, even in clusters, they decoupled to the sequences ''tu du nu''.
#The rare labialized consonants <b>kʷ ġʷ</b> became <em>p b</em> unconditionally (not to be confused with the very similar shift below, which operated <i>after</i> a new wave of labialization!
#The bilabial approximant ''w'' changed to '''v''' (in internal reconstructions, also spelled "β") before a vowel.   
#Sequences of two vowels in which the first vowel was <b>i</b> or <b>u</b> became rising diphthongs. Then all clusters of a consonant followed by a semivowel came to be pronounced as coarticulated single consonantsThus <b>bua</b> became <em>bʷa</em>, <b>bia</b> became <em>bʲa</em>, and so on<b>ñ</b> was assimilated as <em>nʲ</em>.
#Then ''l lʷ'' both became '''w''' (not */v/) in all positions although it retained a rhotic allophoneThe distinction between this new /w/ sound and the one that had just changed to /v/ is important later on, as it keeps sequences like /ʕl/ from being corrupted to /ʕʷ~gʷ/ and then on to /v/, /b/, and /p/. Rather, /l/ stays as /w/.
#The voiced labialized fricatives <b>vʷ zʷ gʷ</b> coalesced as <em>w</em> between vowels. But not ʕʷ ?
#:Notably, the sequence ''sl'' (which was pronounced as IPA [hl] or for some speakers [ɬ]) shifted here to '''sw''', and did not become */hʷ/ or */f/.  That is, it behaved as    the sequence that it was morphologically, instead of sliding with the phonetics into a new single consonant.
#The voiced palatalized fricatives <b>vʲ zʲ gʲ</b> coalesced as <em>j</em> between vowels.
#:''NOTE ON POLITICS'': [[Macro-Pabap_languages#Gold_.281900.29_to_Proto-Highland_Poswob_.282668.29|Proto-Highland Poswa]] breaks off here. 
#The voiced labialized stops <b>bʷ dʷ ǯʷ ġʷ</b> changed to <em>b</em> between vowels.   
#The labiovelar consonants ''kʷ ḳʷ  hʷ gʷ'' became '''p ṗ  f v''' unconditionally. This includes sequences like /kʷl/, despite the precedent set by /sl/ above, because in this case, /kʷl/ was already [kʷ] at the surface level in the proto-language.
#The voiced palatalized stops <b>bʲ dʲ ǯʲ ġʲ</b> changed to <em>ǯ</em> between vowels.
#Sequences of two vowels in which the first vowel was ''i'' or ''u'' became rising diphthongs. Then all clusters of a consonant followed by a semivowel came to be pronounced as coarticulated single consonantsThus ''pua'' became '''pʷa''', ''pia'' became '''pʲa''', and so on.   
#The voiced stops <b>b d ǯ ġ</b> (including ones created by the previous two rules) changed to <em>β ð ž g</em> between vowels.
#Stressed syllabic nasals were opened to sequences containing a schwa.    
#Syllable-final /s/ was, at this time, still pronounced ''[h]'' as in Khulls and other languages. Now, this [h] hopped across a syllable boundary, forming an aspirate consonant, only when the following consonant was also a fricative.  This is in contrast to Khulls, where the rule was nearly the oppositeThis sound change produced the new "aspirated fricatives" '''ðʰ gʰ'''
#The voiced fricative ''g'' assimilated to a neighboring glide /j/ or /w/, thus creating sequences of /jj/ and /ww/. The shift thus was ''gj jg gw wg'' > '''jj jj ww ww'''. This includes ''g'' after /ī/ and /ū/.
#The clusters ''gj jg'' (where [j] is an allophone of /i/) changed to '''jj''' unconditionally.  This new cluster sometimes became resyllabified into /ī/, but usually did not(Because these clusters by definition could only occur between two vowels, the new /jj/ cluster was treated like an ordinary consonant cluster. However, /gj/ and /jg/ had sometimes occurred at word boundaries.
#The voiced fricatives ''d dh    g'' became silent between vowels and occasionally in initial position (due to compounding).
#The voiced fricatives <b>ð z ɣ</b> became silent between vowels and occasionally in initial position (due to compounding). Clusters like gj and jg (in baiga "temple") would change to a doubled /j/ instead of just a normal /j/. Thus doubled /j/ and /w/ were created.
#:When I wrote this, there was no /ž/ in the language at this stage, and so it is possible that ''ž'' also shifts to '''Ø'''.  
#<b>βʷ</b> changed to <em>w</em>.
#:''NOTE ON POLITICS:'' This time period is around 3100 AD, near the beginning of the "Time of Happiness" ('''Yeisu Kasu''': 3138 - 3302 AD).  The branches of the language that fork off from mainline Bābākiam in 3138 all die out, and therefore all of their names in the history are written in Babakiam, but they could be revived as minor local languages, and there would be quite a lot of them.  
#<b>žʲ</b> became <em>ž</em>.
#A voiced consonant in a cluster after  /p/ or /s/ changed briefly to '''ʕ''' and then disappeared.
#All aspirated consonants (except nasals) became voiceless, and the aspiration disappeared.
#:This shift is responsible for important consequences in verb morphology in Poswa more than 5000 years later.  Note that the inherited clusters ''gh hg'' had been merged as '''h''' already in Gold; /hg/ was morphologically equivalent to /sg/, which explains why /sg/ shows up in Play as '''š''' instead of ''s'' like the othersLastly, this shift explains why the Play toponym ''Fanašasa'' corresponds to Leaper ''Xʷanaxanta''.
 
#The voiced fricatives ''v z ž g'' changed to '''b d ǯ ġ''' before a high toneUnlike other languages, Play considered the long vowels to be high tones here.
;NOTE ON POLITICS: This time period is 3138 AD, the beginning of the "Era of Happiness".  The branches of the language that fork off from mainline Bābākiam in 3138 all die out, and therefore all of their names in the history are written in Babakiam, but they could be revived as minor local languages, and there would be quite a lot of them.
#:This is how Play does /g/ > /k/ even though /g/ was a fricative. Note however that in hypothetical words like /vuau/, where a /d/ dropped out, the initial /v/ was part of a separate syllable,  not stressed, and so did not shift to /b/.
   
#The post-velar fricative consonants ''ħ ʕ'', which had been developing labial compression, changed unconditionally to '''f v'''.  
<br>Thus the language now had the consonants <em>p b m f v w β t d n s z ð č ǯ š ž j k g h ɣ r</em> and the vowels <em>a i u ā ī ū e</em>, the last of which was a schwaOf the consonants, all but <em>w β ð č ǯ š ž j</em> could be palatalized or labialized. In final position, <em>p m s w j</em> could occur, although <em>p m</em> were pronounced as glottalsThis language was spoken on Fox Island, although the people were beginning to be pushed out by others.  Some left and founded what became Bābā, others stayed on the southern tip of the island.
#The velar fricatives ''h g'' were fronted to '''š ž''' unconditionally. ''šʲ žʲ'' became '''š ž'''.  This includes the /čʲ/ sequence, which had long ago become [šʲ] but was maintained in spelling because of its importantly distinct grammatical behavior.  
 
#:Importantly, this shift included conditions in hiatus ("holes" in Play terminology), so that ''čiva'' became '''čua'''.
 
#The labialized voiced stops ''bʷ dʷ ǯʷ ġʷ'' changed to '''b'''.  
 
#The palatalized voiced stops ''bʲ dʲ ǯʲ ġʲ'' changed to '''ǯ'''.
====Papies (3100) to Bābākiam (4100)====
#Any remaining voiced stops ''b d ǯ ġ'' changed unconditionally to '''p t č k''' (except when in clusters). 
Alternate names: Proto-Pabappa; Pabappa (in historical texts)
#The voiced fricative ''žʷ'' changed to '''v'''.   
</p>
#Tones were eliminated. However the stress accent (nouns on the penultimate syllable, verbs on the ultimate) remained and became regularized.
 
#The voiced stops ''d ǯ ġ'' (now found only in clusters) changed to '''n nʲ ŋ''' unconditionally.
<ol>
#Remaining ''v'' changed to '''b'''.
 
#Remaining ''z'' changed to '''s'''. 
 
#Newly created vowel sequences beginning with ''i'' or ''u'' collapsed into rising diphthongs, thus creating a new series of palatalized and labialized consonants.   
 
#:This same shift happened twice but many words missed by the first  change were captured by this change.  Note, however, that the reflex of /buya/ is still /buya/; it did not become /bʷia/ and then /bia/.
 
#The labialized consonants ''bʷ žʷ'' changed to '''b''' unconditionally. (Despite the fact that a nearly identical sound change had occurred only shortly before this one, this rule was very common in verb forms that were created by the shift of /bua/ > /bʷa/ > /ba/, and likewise for other vowels.)
 
#The palatalized consonants ''bʲ žʲ'' changed to '''ž''' unconditionally.  (The above shift also applies here; many verbs underwent a shift of /bia/ > /bʲa/ > /ža/.) This shift did not apply to words such as '''bivu''', from earlier /buivu/, because the /i/ in this word was not [ʲ] but still a true /i/.
<li>&nbsp; The cluster <b>ps</b> changed to <em>ts</em>, thus merging with frontalized <em>k</em>.  <b>pš</b> became <em>č</em>.
#A schwa ''ə'' in a word in which the following syllable had /a/ changed also to '''a'''. Note that this is the only vowel change in the entire history of the language going back 3500 years, even before the Gold language, except for a few diphthongizations such as /ua/ > /wa/. However, the vowel system became very unstable in the succeeding period as the language developed into Poswa and Pabappa.
 
#The stress was shifted to the first syllable in all words.
</li><li>&nbsp; A nasal in a cluster following <b>p</b> or <b>s</b> disappeared.
 
</li><li>&nbsp; The glottal stop <b>ʔ</b> disappeared in all positions. (But not ʕ or ʢ or ĥ.)
 
</li><li>&nbsp; The voiced fricatives <b>β v z ž ɣ</b> changed to <em>b b d ǯ g</em> before a high tone.
 
</li><li>&nbsp; A voiced sound in a cluster following <b>p</b> or <b>s</b> changed to <em>ɣ</em>.
(appears in many verb forms)</li>
   
<li>&nbsp; The post-velar fricative consonants <b>ħ ʕ</b> changed to <em>f β</em>. Note that this was the (rare) "true" /h/, not the common {h} which is /x/.
 
</li>
 
<li>&nbsp; The clusters <b>pɣ sɣ</b> changed to the ejectives <em>ṕ ś</em>, but this shift did not affect the labialized or palatalized versions(These are the same consonants that became clicks in some Kxel languages.)  Note: really this should not just be /p/ and /s/, but really all voiceless sounds.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
What happened to sequences like mk or pk?</li><li>&nbsp;  The velar fricatives <b>h ɣ</b> were fronted to <em>š ž</em> unconditionally<b>šʲ žʲ</b> became <em>š ž</em>.
 
 
</li><li>&nbsp; The voiced stops <b>bʷ dʷ ǯʷ gʷ</b> changed to <em>b</em>.
</li><li>&nbsp; The voiced stops <b>bʲ dʲ ǯʲ gʲ</b> changed to <em>ǯ</em>.
 
 
</li><li>&nbsp; The voiced stops <b>b d ǯ g</b> changed to <em>p t č k</em> (except when in clusters)
 
 
</li><li>&nbsp; The voiced fricative <b>ð</b> changed to <em>β</em>.  (<b>ð</b> had been revived due to loanwords.)
</li><li>&nbsp; The voiced fricatives <b>v vʷ zʷ žʷ</b> changed to <em>β</em>. 
</li><li>&nbsp; The voiced fricatives <b>vʲ zʲ žʲ</b> changed to <em>ž</em>. 
 
 
 
</li><li>&nbsp; <b>βʷ</b> changed to <em>w</em>.
 
</li><li>&nbsp;  <b>žʲ</b> became <em>ž</em>.
 
</li><li>&nbsp; Tones were eliminated. However the stress accent (nouns
on the penultimate syllable, verbs on the ultimate) remained and became
regularized.
</li><li>&nbsp; The voiced stops <b>d ǯ g</b> changed to <em>n nʲ ŋ</em> unconditionally.
 
 
 
 
</li><li>&nbsp;  The cluster <b>pb</b> became <em>pp</em>.
 
 
 
</li><li>&nbsp; <b>β</b> changed to <em>b</em>.
 
</li><li>&nbsp; <b>z</b> changed to <em>s</em>.
 
</li><li>&nbsp;  The ejectives <b>ṕ ś</b> became plain.
 
 
 
</li><li>&nbsp;  The postalveolar affricate <b>č</b> was softened to <em>š</em> unconditionally.
 
 
</li><li>&nbsp; Newly created vowel sequences beginning with <b>i</b> or <b>u</b> collapsed into rising diphthongs, thus creating a new series of palatalized and labialized consonants. 
 
</li><li>&nbsp; The labialized consonants <b>bʷ žʷ</b> changed to <em>b</em> unconditionally.
 
</li><li>&nbsp; The palatalized consonants <b>bʲ žʲ</b> changed to <em>ž</em> unconditionally.
 
 
 
</li><li>&nbsp;  The stress was shifted to the first syllable in all words.  Thus the language had the consonants <em>p m f b w t n s k ŋ š ž j</em> and the vowels <em>a i u ə</em>, the last of which was a schwa.  Of the consonants, all except <em>b w ž j</em> could be followed by a semivowel <em>w</em> or <em>j</em>, when occurring at the beginning of a syllable.  At the end of a syllable, only <em>p m w s j</em> could occur.  This stage of the language is referred to as <b>Bābākiam</b>, "city language".&nbsp;
Spoken around the year 4100, not only in the city of Bābā but a significant
amount of territory away from it in all directions.</li></ol>

Latest revision as of 14:49, 5 October 2022

Gold (1900) to Play (4100)

The Play language evolved from the Soft Hands dialect of Gold, also known as Wolf in Wool, Broken Shields, and perhaps at least one other name. It drove out the Lazy Palms language and took relatively few loanwords. There were also several other languages spoken in this territory, including one language spoken by Star immigrants, probably a branch of Amade.

Wolf in Wool had not yet evolved its characteristic sound, so the relative scarcity of loanwords was not due to the acoustics of the language, but rather a cultural identification with the new language being imported from overseas. Any loans that were taken in had /e o/ shifting to /ə/ for the entire time period of this language, though /ē ō/ may have been borrowed as /əi əu/ or /ai au/ or either.

  1. At the end of a syllable, the pharyngeal fricative ʕ disappeared and changed the previous vowel to a high tone. It also voiced the following consonant.
  2. Syllable-final k ḳ ŋ changed to kʷ ḳʷ ŋʷ.
  3. Feeding on the above change, in compounds, if the final consonant was one of /kʷ ḳʷ/ and the first consonant of the next morpheme was one of the velars k ḳ h ŋ, it also became labiovelar. Thus for example /kk/ > /kʷkʷ/ or /kʷ:/. It did not happen for other consonants. Prenasals did not shift; later, the cluster /ŋʷk/ becomes /mk/, which is pronounced as spelled but later becomes [ŋk], [mpt], etc depending on dialect.
  4. In initial position, the labialized coronals tʷ dʷ nʷ shifted to t d n. Elsewhere, even in clusters, they decoupled to the sequences tu du nu.
  5. The bilabial approximant w changed to v (in internal reconstructions, also spelled "β") before a vowel.
  6. Then l lʷ both became w (not */v/) in all positions although it retained a rhotic allophone. The distinction between this new /w/ sound and the one that had just changed to /v/ is important later on, as it keeps sequences like /ʕl/ from being corrupted to /ʕʷ~gʷ/ and then on to /v/, /b/, and /p/. Rather, /l/ stays as /w/.
    Notably, the sequence sl (which was pronounced as IPA [hl] or for some speakers [ɬ]) shifted here to sw, and did not become */hʷ/ or */f/. That is, it behaved as the sequence that it was morphologically, instead of sliding with the phonetics into a new single consonant.
    NOTE ON POLITICS: Proto-Highland Poswa breaks off here.
  7. The labiovelar consonants kʷ ḳʷ hʷ gʷ became p ṗ f v unconditionally. This includes sequences like /kʷl/, despite the precedent set by /sl/ above, because in this case, /kʷl/ was already [kʷ] at the surface level in the proto-language.
  8. Sequences of two vowels in which the first vowel was i or u became rising diphthongs. Then all clusters of a consonant followed by a semivowel came to be pronounced as coarticulated single consonants. Thus pua became pʷa, pia became pʲa, and so on.
  9. Stressed syllabic nasals were opened to sequences containing a schwa.
  10. The voiced fricative g assimilated to a neighboring glide /j/ or /w/, thus creating sequences of /jj/ and /ww/. The shift thus was gj jg gw wg > jj jj ww ww. This includes g after /ī/ and /ū/.
  11. The voiced fricatives d dh g became silent between vowels and occasionally in initial position (due to compounding).
    When I wrote this, there was no /ž/ in the language at this stage, and so it is possible that ž also shifts to Ø.
    NOTE ON POLITICS: This time period is around 3100 AD, near the beginning of the "Time of Happiness" (Yeisu Kasu: 3138 - 3302 AD). The branches of the language that fork off from mainline Bābākiam in 3138 all die out, and therefore all of their names in the history are written in Babakiam, but they could be revived as minor local languages, and there would be quite a lot of them.
  12. A voiced consonant in a cluster after /p/ or /s/ changed briefly to ʕ and then disappeared.
    This shift is responsible for important consequences in verb morphology in Poswa more than 5000 years later. Note that the inherited clusters gh hg had been merged as h already in Gold; /hg/ was morphologically equivalent to /sg/, which explains why /sg/ shows up in Play as š instead of s like the others. Lastly, this shift explains why the Play toponym Fanašasa corresponds to Leaper Xʷanaxanta.
  13. The voiced fricatives v z ž g changed to b d ǯ ġ before a high tone. Unlike other languages, Play considered the long vowels to be high tones here.
    This is how Play does /g/ > /k/ even though /g/ was a fricative. Note however that in hypothetical words like /vuau/, where a /d/ dropped out, the initial /v/ was part of a separate syllable, not stressed, and so did not shift to /b/.
  14. The post-velar fricative consonants ħ ʕ, which had been developing labial compression, changed unconditionally to f v.
  15. The velar fricatives h g were fronted to š ž unconditionally. šʲ žʲ became š ž. This includes the /čʲ/ sequence, which had long ago become [šʲ] but was maintained in spelling because of its importantly distinct grammatical behavior.
    Importantly, this shift included conditions in hiatus ("holes" in Play terminology), so that čiva became čua.
  16. The labialized voiced stops bʷ dʷ ǯʷ ġʷ changed to b.
  17. The palatalized voiced stops bʲ dʲ ǯʲ ġʲ changed to ǯ.
  18. Any remaining voiced stops b d ǯ ġ changed unconditionally to p t č k (except when in clusters).
  19. The voiced fricative žʷ changed to v.
  20. Tones were eliminated. However the stress accent (nouns on the penultimate syllable, verbs on the ultimate) remained and became regularized.
  21. The voiced stops d ǯ ġ (now found only in clusters) changed to n nʲ ŋ unconditionally.
  22. Remaining v changed to b.
  23. Remaining z changed to s.
  24. Newly created vowel sequences beginning with i or u collapsed into rising diphthongs, thus creating a new series of palatalized and labialized consonants.
    This same shift happened twice but many words missed by the first change were captured by this change. Note, however, that the reflex of /buya/ is still /buya/; it did not become /bʷia/ and then /bia/.
  25. The labialized consonants bʷ žʷ changed to b unconditionally. (Despite the fact that a nearly identical sound change had occurred only shortly before this one, this rule was very common in verb forms that were created by the shift of /bua/ > /bʷa/ > /ba/, and likewise for other vowels.)
  26. The palatalized consonants bʲ žʲ changed to ž unconditionally. (The above shift also applies here; many verbs underwent a shift of /bia/ > /bʲa/ > /ža/.) This shift did not apply to words such as bivu, from earlier /buivu/, because the /i/ in this word was not [ʲ] but still a true /i/.
  27. A schwa ə in a word in which the following syllable had /a/ changed also to a. Note that this is the only vowel change in the entire history of the language going back 3500 years, even before the Gold language, except for a few diphthongizations such as /ua/ > /wa/. However, the vowel system became very unstable in the succeeding period as the language developed into Poswa and Pabappa.
  28. The stress was shifted to the first syllable in all words.