Proto-Hesperic (2018): Difference between revisions
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'''Proto-Hesperic''' is a [[Macro-Indo-European]] [[diachronic conlang]] by [[User:WeepingElf|Jörg Rhiemeier]] that is currently under construction, and represents the reconstructed common ancestor of the [[Hesperic]] [[language family]]. It is a [[lostlang]] and forms a part of the [[League of Lost Languages]]. Proto-Hesperic is | '''Proto-Hesperic''' is a [[Macro-Indo-European]] [[diachronic conlang]] by [[User:WeepingElf|Jörg Rhiemeier]] that is currently under construction, and represents the reconstructed common ancestor of the [[Hesperic]] [[language family]]. It is a [[lostlang]] and forms a part of the [[League of Lost Languages]]. Proto-Hesperic is a head-final agglutinating active-stative language related to [[Proto-Indo-European]], assumed to have been spoken in Central Europe around 4000 BC; it also resembles [[Proto-Uralic]] in its morphology, and seems to form a kind of "missing link" [[Indo-Uralic|between the two families]]. The vocabulary is in part based on Proto-Indo-European, in part on words with uncertain etymologies in Celtic and Germanic that may be loanwords from lost substratum languages; there are also some original creations in the vocabulary and a few words from argots such as [[Wikipedia:Shelta|Shelta]] or [[Wikipedia:Rotwelsch|Rotwelsch]]. | ||
==Phonology== | ==Phonology== |
Revision as of 11:49, 24 July 2017
Proto-Hesperic is a Macro-Indo-European diachronic conlang by Jörg Rhiemeier that is currently under construction, and represents the reconstructed common ancestor of the Hesperic language family. It is a lostlang and forms a part of the League of Lost Languages. Proto-Hesperic is a head-final agglutinating active-stative language related to Proto-Indo-European, assumed to have been spoken in Central Europe around 4000 BC; it also resembles Proto-Uralic in its morphology, and seems to form a kind of "missing link" between the two families. The vocabulary is in part based on Proto-Indo-European, in part on words with uncertain etymologies in Celtic and Germanic that may be loanwords from lost substratum languages; there are also some original creations in the vocabulary and a few words from argots such as Shelta or Rotwelsch.
Phonology
Consonants
Labial | Coronal | Palatal | Velar | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aspirated stops | *ph | *th | *kh | |
Neutral stops | (*p) | *t | *k | |
Voiced stops | *b | *d | *g | |
Fricatives | *s | *x | ||
Nasals | *m | *n | ||
Liquids | *l *r | |||
Semivowels | *w | *j |
The phoneme *p is marginal and may not have existed. The language may have also had a labialized velar series, but these probably just were plain velars followed by *w.
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | *i | *u | |
Low | *a |