Alfermann's Law: Difference between revisions
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In all West Hesperic languages ''except'' [[Albic]], this paradigm underwent a further change due to the neutralization of final nasals as '''*-n'''. This change led to the merger of the old dative and objective case, and the shift of the old partitive case to the meaning of a dative case. | |||
The East Hesperic languages (Valdiska and Duniscian) did not undergo this change, nor did Viddan. | The East Hesperic languages (Valdiska and Duniscian) did not undergo this change, nor did Viddan. |
Revision as of 07:56, 19 February 2018
Alfermann's Law (named after the fictional linguist Juliane Alfermann) is a complex change in the phonology and morphology of the West Hesperic languages. In these languages, non-paradigmatic final *a is lost; this loss affected inanimate a-stem nouns (e.g. *khara > *khar 'stone') and oblique case endings (e.g. *xnarana > *xnaran 'man' (dative).
In animate nouns and verb endings, number inflection was reorganized such that *-a marked the singular, *-u dual and *-i plural in all cases. This involved suffixation of *-a to i-stem and u-stem animate nouns (e.g. *xasi > *xasia 'star'). The nominal paradigm thus changed from the Proto-Hesperic paradigm
Case | Singular | Dual | Plural |
---|---|---|---|
Agentive | *xnara | *xnarax | *xnaras |
Objective | *xnaram | *xnarax | *xnaras |
Genitive | *xnarasa | *xnarawsa | *xnarajsa |
Partitive | *xnarala | *xnarawla | *xnarajla |
Dative | *xnarana | *xnarawna | *xnarajna |
to this type:
Case | Singular | Dual | Plural |
---|---|---|---|
Agentive | *xnara | *xnaru | *xnari |
Objective | *xnaram | *xnarum | *xnarim |
Genitive | *xnaras | *xnarus | *xnaris |
Partitive | *xnaral | *xnarul | *xnaril |
Dative | *xnaran | *xnarun | *xnarin |
In all West Hesperic languages except Albic, this paradigm underwent a further change due to the neutralization of final nasals as *-n. This change led to the merger of the old dative and objective case, and the shift of the old partitive case to the meaning of a dative case.
The East Hesperic languages (Valdiska and Duniscian) did not undergo this change, nor did Viddan.