Proto-Albic: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
Line 82: Line 82:
|}
|}


There is no length, nasality or other secondary distinction that can be reconstructed.
==Morphology==
As the Old Albic dialects agree very closely in terms of morphology, the morphology of Proto-Albic probably was very similar to that of Classical Old Albic, though it is of course possible that all dialects innovated in some points into the same direction.


[[Category:Albic languages]]
[[Category:Albic languages]]
[[Category:Diachronic conlangs]]
[[Category:Diachronic conlangs]]
[[Category:Protolanguages]]
[[Category:Protolanguages]]

Revision as of 13:07, 30 January 2015

Proto-Albic
Spoken in: British Isles
Timeline/Universe: League of Lost Languages; The Elvenpath
Total speakers: extinct (evolved into various daughter languages)
Genealogical classification: Hesperic
Albic
Proto-Albic
Basic word order: VSO
Morphological type: agglutinating
Morphosyntactic alignment: active-stative
Created by:
Jörg Rhiemeier 2001-

Proto-Albic is the reconstructed common ancestor of the Albic languages; it is assumed to have been spoken in southern Britain between 2000 and 1500 BC.

The language can be reconstructed very well from the attested dialects of Old Albic and their descendants.

Phonology

Consonants

Proto-Albic is reconstructed with 19 consonant phonemes.

  Labial Coronal Dorsal Laryngeal
Nasals *m *n *ng  
Voiced stops *b *d *g  
Neutral stops *p *t *k  
Aspirated stops *p' *t' *k'  
Fricatives   *s   *h
Liquids and semivowels *w *l *r *j *3

As usual with protolanguages, the exact phonetic values of these sounds are uncertain. Especially the sound *3 is somewhat mysterious, but the best guess is that it was a voiced glottal or pharyngeal fricative or approximant. The phonotactic behaviour at any rate shows that it had a high degree of sonority, in a class with the liquids and semivowels.

Vowels

The vowel inventory of Proto-Albic consists of only three vowels.

  Front Central Back
Close *i   *u
Open   *a  

There is no length, nasality or other secondary distinction that can be reconstructed.

Morphology

As the Old Albic dialects agree very closely in terms of morphology, the morphology of Proto-Albic probably was very similar to that of Classical Old Albic, though it is of course possible that all dialects innovated in some points into the same direction.