Garonnian/Phonology: Difference between revisions

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In unstressed positions, only the vowels {{IPA|/a, i, u/}} are allowed. Vowel length are phonemicized as a result of losses of certain consonants (these are, {{IPA|*/β, ð, ɣ/}}), but also as a result of simplification of certain vowel hiatuses (''teir'' {{IPA|*/ti.ˈir/}} → {{IPA|/ˈtiːr/}} "to hold", ''aad'' {{IPA|/ˈaːd/}} "(s)he had").
In unstressed positions, only the vowels {{IPA|/a, i, u/}} are allowed. Vowel length are phonemicized as a result of losses of certain consonants (these are, {{IPA|*/β, ð, ɣ/}}), but also as a result of simplification of certain vowel hiatuses (''teer'' {{IPA|*/.ˈɛr/}} → {{IPA|/ˈtɛːr/}} "to hold", ''aad'' {{IPA|/ˈaːd/}} "(s)he had").


== Consonant structure ==
== Consonant structure ==
The maximal consonant structure in Garonnian is C¹C²S¹VS²C¹C².  
The maximal consonant structure in Garonnian is C¹C²S¹VS²C¹C². However, there are many synchronic metatheses called Nicholshill's law (named after the fictional female linguist named Annett Nicholshill)<ref>Also known as Annette Nicholshill. The pronunciation of her name was {{IPA|/aˈɲɛts nitʃɔˈziʎː/}}, with silent ''-l-''.</ref> that could occur at unpleasant consonant clusters. The rules include:
* Liquids always precede other consonants when word-final.
* Nasals always precede other consonants when word-final.
Some examples:
* ''**gëdr'' → ''gë'''r'''d'' "to sell"
* ''**Alrigs'' → ''A'''r'''ligs'' "Alaric, a male given name"
* ''**ponms'' → ''pom'''n'''s'' "we put"


== Stress ==
== Stress ==
Line 159: Line 165:


== Phonological changes ==
== Phonological changes ==
=== Vulgar Latin to Proto-Gallo-Sicilian ===
''See [[Garonnian/Sound changes]]''
* Deletion of vowels in contact with the liquids ({{IPA|/l/}} or {{IPA|/r/}}): ''speculum'' → {{IPA|/isˈpɛkʲu/}} → {{IPA|/isˈpjɔdʒu/}} → ''pesçog​̧'' {{IPA|/pisˈtʃɔdʒ/}} "mirror"
* Early lenition: {{IPA|/b/}} and {{IPA|/v/}} merge to {{IPA|/β/}} in intervocalic positions. Before liquids, however, the sounds change to {{IPA|/w/}} instead (Latin ''parabolō'' → {{IPA|/paˈrawlu/}} → Garonnian ''parol'' {{IPA|/paˈrɔl/}} "I speak"). Note them will deleted before {{IPA|/j/}}.
* Palatalization of {{IPA|/l/}} following a consonant to {{IPA|/j/}} (note cluster {{IPA|/kl/}} → {{IPA|/kʲ}} → {{IPA|/tʃ/}} → {{IPA|/dʒ/}}, an unusual development in standards of Romance languages, e.g. Latin ''oculus'' → Garonnian ''ueg​̧'' "eye").
* Palatalization of {{IPA|/k(ɛ,i,j)/}}, {{IPA|/ɡ(ɛ,i,j)/}} to {{IPA|/tʃ/}} and {{IPA|/j/}}, respectively. The following original {{IPA|/j/}} sounds (resulted from {{IPA|/e(ː)/}} and {{IPA|/i(ː)/}} preceding vowels) are deleted.
** Notice also additional palatalizations that only occur before {{IPA|/j/}}: {{IPA|/lʲ/}} → {{IPA|/ʎ/}}, {{IPA|/nʲ/}} → {{IPA|/ɲ/}}, {{IPA|/sʲ/}} → {{IPA|/ʃ/}}, and {{IPA|/tʲ/}} → {{IPA|/ts/}}. Others were still denoted by plain palatalization: {{IPA|/mʲ/}}, {{IPA|/pʲ/}}, and {{IPA|/rʲ/}}. Note that original {{IPA|/bʲ/}} in early Proto-Gallo-Sicilian times transformed into {{IPA|/j/}}: ''habeō'' → ''ai'' "I have".
* Vowel shifts: ten vowels in Classical Latin are reduced to only five vowels in Proto-Gallo-Sicilian:
{|
! Classical Latin
| a
| aː
| e
| eː
| i
| iː
| o
| oː
| u
| uː
|-
! Proto-Gallo-Sicilian
| colspan="2" | a
| ɛ
| colspan="3" | i
| ɔ
| colspan="3" | u
|}
* Chain shift involving lenitions occured when the Proto-Gallo-Sicilians migrate to Padania, occuring intervocalically, word-finally, or before liquids ({{IPA|/l/}} or {{IPA|/r/}}):
{| class="wikitable"
! Shift 1
! rowspan="8" | →
! Shift 2
! rowspan="8" | →
! Shift 3
|-
| {{IPA|/k/}}
| {{IPA|/ɡ/}}
| {{IPA|/ɣ/}}
|-
| {{IPA|/p/}}
| {{IPA|/b/}}
| {{IPA|/β/}}
|-
| {{IPA|/t/}}
| {{IPA|/d/}}
| {{IPA|/ð/}}
|-
| {{IPA|/f/}}
| {{IPA|/v/}}
| N/A
|-
| {{IPA|/s/}}
| {{IPA|/z/}}
| N/A
|-
| {{IPA|/ts/}}
| {{IPA|/dz/}}
| N/A
|-
| {{IPA|/tʃ/}}
| {{IPA|/dʒ/}}
| N/A
|}

Latest revision as of 13:47, 27 January 2022

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal /m/ /n/ /ɲ/ /ŋ/
Plosive /p/ /b/ /t/ /d/ /k/ /ɡ/
Affricate /ts/ /dz/ /tʃ/ /dʒ/
Fricative /f/ /v/ /s/ /z/ /ʃ/ /ʒ/ /h/
Trill /r/
Approximants /l/ /ʎ/

Unlike many Gallo-Romance languages (French technically lacked this), Garonnian lacks final obstruent devoicing. Unusually among Romance languages, Garonnian exhibits initial consonant mutations and contain somewhat unusual phoneme /ŋ/ which can occur in any positions.

Orthography

Spelling Pronunciation value
Major Examples Minor Examples
b /b/ bull
c Before a, o, u /k/ cur
Before e, i /tʃ/ ciul

Vowels

Front Central Back
Short Long Short Long Short Long
Close /i/ /iː/ /u/ /uː/
Mid /ɛ/ /ɛː/ /ɔ/ /ɔː/
Open /a/ /aː/

In unstressed positions, only the vowels /a, i, u/ are allowed. Vowel length are phonemicized as a result of losses of certain consonants (these are, */β, ð, ɣ/), but also as a result of simplification of certain vowel hiatuses (teer */tɛ.ˈɛr//ˈtɛːr/ "to hold", aad /ˈaːd/ "(s)he had").

Consonant structure

The maximal consonant structure in Garonnian is C¹C²S¹VS²C¹C². However, there are many synchronic metatheses called Nicholshill's law (named after the fictional female linguist named Annett Nicholshill)[1] that could occur at unpleasant consonant clusters. The rules include:

  • Liquids always precede other consonants when word-final.
  • Nasals always precede other consonants when word-final.

Some examples:

  • **gëdrrd "to sell"
  • **AlrigsArligs "Alaric, a male given name"
  • **ponmspomns "we put"

Stress

Like French, Garonnian words are always stressed in the last syllable. However, words containing vowel hiatuses are stressed in the second-to-last (penultimate) syllable (bua /ˈbu.a/ "good (fem. sg.)"). As previously I, Willett said, only /a, i, u/ are allowed in unstressed syllables.

Phonological changes

See Garonnian/Sound changes

  1. Also known as Annette Nicholshill. The pronunciation of her name was /aˈɲɛts nitʃɔˈziʎː/, with silent -l-.