South Albic: Difference between revisions

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|colspan="2" bgcolor="#0000CC" color="#FFFFFF" align="center" |<font color="#FFFFFF"><big>'''South Albic'''</big></font>
|colspan="2" bgcolor="#6666FF" align="center" |'''South Albic'''
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|valign="top"|Spoken in:
|valign="top"|Spoken in:
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&nbsp;&nbsp;[[Macaronesian]]
&nbsp;&nbsp;[[Macaronesian]]
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|colspan="2" bgcolor="#0000CC" color="#FFFFFF" align="center" |<font color="#FFFFFF"><big>'''Created by:'''</big></font>
|colspan="2" bgcolor="#6666FF" align="center" |'''Created by:'''
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||[[User:WeepingElf|Jörg Rhiemeier]]||2001-
||[[User:WeepingElf|Jörg Rhiemeier]]||2001-

Revision as of 08:10, 28 August 2006

South Albic
Spoken in: southern Britain and elsewhere
Timeline/Universe: League of Lost Languages, UKW World
Total speakers:
Genealogical classification: Albic

 South Albic
  Old Albic
  Low Elvish
  Macaronesian

Created by:
Jörg Rhiemeier 2001-

South Albic is a branch of the Albic family spoken in southern Britain and a few other places. It includes the classical form of Old Albic as well as the modern Low Elvish and Macaronesian languages.

South Albic is the largest branch of Albic in terms of both languages belonging to it and speakers of those languages.

The classical Old Albic language is based on the South Albic dialects of the classical period, and the modern South Albic languages can be considered more or less direct descendants of it.

Sound changes in South Albic

Symbols:

T neutral stop
T` aspirated stop
D voiced stop
Th fricative
C any consonant
C* zero or more consonants
V any vowel
X any segment
X* zero or more segments of any kind
# word boundary

The three grades of stops (neutral, aspirated, voiced) remain distinct.

*h deletes with vowel lengthening in codas:

Vh > V: / _(C,#)

Clusters of s+stop are simplified except intervocally:

sT > T`
sT` > T`
sD > D

Clusters of stop+s undergo metathesis:

Ts > sT
T`s > sT`
Ds > sD

Intervocalic s becomes r (partly restored by analogy):

s > r /V_V

In the eastern dialects, s also deletes word-initially before resonants.

Aspirates are changed into neutral stops if another aspirate or h follows (precedence from right to left):

T` > T / _X*T`
T` > T /_X*h

Vowels undergo umlaut (precedence from right to left):

V > [+open] / _C*a
V > [+front] / _C*i
V > [+round] / _C*u

Aspirated stops are changed into fricatives:

T` > Th

This latter change was still underway in classical times: many rural dialects still had aspirated stops.