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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 08:56, 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.

See also