Gala language: Difference between revisions
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==Phonology== | ==Phonology== | ||
Galà is the most conservative descendant of [[Old Andanese]], which was in turn the most conservative branch of the [[Tapilula]] family. | |||
===Diachronics=== | ===Diachronics=== | ||
====Old Andnese to Gala==== | ====Old Andnese to Gala==== |
Revision as of 10:06, 25 September 2017
Galà is a branch of Old Andanese. Sometimes spelled Gala or Galai (exonyms). Galai is very conservative. /q/ > /ʔ/ > /0/ unconditionally; labialization was mostly dropped; intervocalic voicing became phonemic (because the consonants were restored to voiceless if stressed); the voiced fricatives /g gʷ/ hardened in initial position into stops.
- NOTE, SOME OF THE CHANGES BELOW ARE ACTUALLY INTENDED TO BE FOR OLD ANDANESE, NOT GALA. THE REASON THEY ARE NOT ADDRESSED YET IS BECAUSE PREVIOUSLY I HAD HAD ONLY ONE DAUGHTER LANGUAGE FOR OLD ANDANESE, AND THE SHIFTS IN QUESTION DIDNT MATTER BECAUSE ALL OF THEIR OUTCOMES MERGED. Thus Tapilula phonology is relevant here.
Tap 2 Old &anese:
- The genitive infix in Tapilula was -ə̀h-, which changed very early on to -əh`- (that is, an infix of /əh/ plus a shift of the tone onto the following syllable). Then the schwa disappeared, creating aspirated consonants. Except for a few words where there had been voiced stops, this changed nothing whatsoever.
- Options are:
- 1) irregular retention of the schwa in this morpheme as /i/, then a change to palatalization. This contradicts mainline Andanese, however, which would not split off for another 1500 years.
- 2) Generalization of the infix to a suffix after some "misbehaving" words, probably those ending in /q/ + vowel, make it appear like a suffix.
- 3) Generalization of aspiration, perhaps with a Khulls-like shift of /mʰ/ > /mp/ so that the words will not collide with their own genitives. This still contradicts mainline Andanese, but only at a later stage.
- 4) Do nothing, since the tone shift alone should be sufficient to mark the genitive, even in monosyllabic roots, so long as monosyllabic roots are assumed to have been bisyllables that previously ended in a schwa or in /qi/.
- Note that Andanese did in fact retain sequences like [mha]~[mʰa] until quite late, even though they were spelled as /maha/ etc and thus did not appear to have once contained a schwa. Thus, Galà could do /mh/ > /mp/ while mainline Andanese did /mVh/=[mh] > /m/. Since the stops /p/ and /t/ were allophonically voiced between vowels, the resulting /bh dh/ would change back into /p t/ and thus become phonemic. Thus the only "problem" sounds whose mutated form merges with the plain form are /h/, /k/, and possibly /q/. /g/ probably mutates to /h/ instead of to /k/, or perhaps to a new phoneme /x/.
Phonology
Galà is the most conservative descendant of Old Andanese, which was in turn the most conservative branch of the Tapilula family.
Diachronics
Old Andnese to Gala
- Because the language is vowel-strong, it may do /ti/ > /si/ (likely t > č > š > s). Possibly also /ki/ > /si/, and then /kʷi/ > /ki/.
- /q/ > /0/ may be ignored in monosyllabic words, or perhaps in initial position generally, in favor of shifting to /k/. This would prevent words consisting of just single vowels from arising. If so, this /q/ > /k/ must be made later than the /k/ > /s/ shift. /qʰ/ (arguably better analyzed as a cluster /qh/) could also misbehave and thus survive as /k/.
- possible changes for aspirates (see above). instead of /mʰ/ > /mp/ (as in Khulls), perhaps /mʰ/ to /f/ (separate from hʷ) and /nʰ/ to /s/. This was an idea for mainline Andanese that I later scrapped.
- Also, the syllable /qi/ might delete its /i/ early on, leading to a setup similar to that of Japanese, where geminate conosnants appear in place of the earlier /qi/. Possibly /qu/ also. Note, however, that this would not likely happen if there was not also a nasal coda other than that left by the remnants of the very rare syllabic consonants.
- Initial /d/ is rare, coming only from the sequence /ġi/ plus a vowel. There are probably no phonemic palatals in the language; if there are, they are like Japanese in that they cannot occur before /i/.
- /g/ merges with /ġ/, with the stop pronunciation winning out eventually. The dot above the /ġ/ is to keep it distinct when Galai words are loaned into other languages that still have a contrast.
- /hj/ probably to /s/ (not given as such in the wordlist below).
vowel ashifts
like japanese, the vowel setup was once /a e i o u ja jo ju/ but with no */je ji/ since they were automatically palaltalizat.ed. like jp (and Khulls), [je] > [e] later on, leacing a gap.
- PROBABLE FINAL PHONOLOGY
/p b m/
/t d n s l/
/k ŋ h g/
/a e i o u/
/ă à ā á/
/j/ and /w/ could be considered phonemes as well, despite being written as vowels, since they cannot carry tones.
A rare /r/ may come from the sequence /lj/.
Climate and geography
Galà is located on the continental divide, within the highest terrain of the Hykwus Mountains, with even the lowest valleys having an elevation above 4000 feet. It shares this natural environment with the Pabap state of Blip to its east and the independent nation of Wimpus to its north.
Terrain and environment
Gala is spoken in upland Nama, for which the lingua franca is Khulls, and freely loans words from Khulls.
The nation of Galà is in a very interesting location. To its east lies the Pabap state of Blip and the historically aboriginal nation of Ihhai; to its north lies a diasporic historically Andanese nation named Wimpus (later settled by Pabaps); to the southwest lies the notoriously violent nation of Litila; and to the south are the Subumpamese states of Puripup and Punsam.[1]
Despite being surrounded on all sides by nations with violent histories, Galà itself was not affected by most of these wars because of its highland location and terrain even more mountainous than those of its neighbors.
Climate
THe wind in Galà blows mostly from the south. Despite the high elevation, the climate is broadly similar to sea-level sites located a few hundred miles to the north, both in temperature and in precipitation. However, valleys can get very cold in winter, with temperatures below —30°F having been recorded in many towns, and it is in valleys where the greatest human population concentration is found. On the other hand, wind is generally calm during extremely cold winter nights, so even here the coldest weather is found in the mountains.
Relations with neighboring nations
Galà bordered Litila. The Galà word for crab was hekăba, and they referred to the crabs of Litila with this name.
Table of cognates
The table below makes some assumptions, such as unconditional /k/ > /t/ in Olati and /hj/ > /s/ in Galà.
Note that many roots are preserved only as parts of words rather than independent words, since this language family made abundant use of classifier prefixes to pad problematic words that collided with other words. This means that the homophones, especially those found in Late Andanese, did not cause problems in comprehension. For example, the word for "dolphin" appears to be a compound of sa "love" and gu "breast", but the two smaller words are used with classifiers only. Other words are attested but not often used: for example, the common word for torch in Late Andanese is not hunupu but the related ihunu.
Furthermore in these languages, especially Classical (and Late) Andanese, there are no differences between the sound changes that take place word-internally and those take affect independent words.
Also, semantic shifts are not given here.
This also assumes Galà ēa > yā, but īa > ya. As in Japanese, the shfit fails if the second element is /e/ or /i/.
Old Andanese | meaning | Galà | Proto-Olati | Lyugi | Late Andanese |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
kakŏbe | tree | kakŏbe | tatŏbe | kakē | kakupi |
kʷonŏṁ[2] | orange | konŏn | porō (?) | punu | |
gimòga | whip | gimòga | yimā | imua | |
gegŭbo [3] | semen | gegŭbo | yúbo | gigū | yupu |
hʷekăl | seaweed | hekā | fetā (?) | hukā | |
hʷèyunge | claw | sūnge | fūne (?) | sugi | |
kŏgu | tree bark | kŏgu | |||
agʷùdu | countryside, plain field | agùdu | avùdu | alutu | |
galàqi | Galàqi (placename) | galà | yalàki | alai | |
hʷèyabe | the Sĕyepa religion | sābe | fābe | hiapi (sapi?) | |
pudigʷèyo | diaper | pudigyō | pudivō | putiliu | |
lìya | beaver | lyă (?) | lyā (?) | lia | |
nàgo nòma | honeybee | nagonòma | rōroma (?) | naguma | |
hìqi | key | hì | sìki | hii | |
heyăbo | lap (body part); pubis | sābo | sábo | sapu | |
lòqa | mouth | lòka | lua | ||
làda | girl, woman; child | làda | làda | làra | lata |
qĕi | wheel | kē | kē | i | |
qèga | sawgrass | kèga | kā | ya | |
hʷàhʷa | hair of the head | hàha | fàfa | haha | |
gʷū | milk | gū | vū | lu | |
qʷū | urine; pee | kū | pū | pu | |
ukòna | wine | ukòna | utòra | ukuna | |
hʷŭba | Fuba (a placename and tribal name)[4] | hŭba | fŭba | hupa | |
pè | a type of tall grass; cognate to gʷăga | pè | pè | pi | |
pĕ | hip; side face | pĕ | pi | ||
hʷŭm | breast; nipple | hun | fū(?) | gu | |
hĭbo | cranberry | hĭbo | sĭbo | hipu | |
gìbi[5] | water | ipi | |||
hʷugʷàyi | menstrual pad | hugē | fuvī | hulai | |
kùqi | bird's beak | kù | tùki | kui | |
hṅda | snow | hĭnda | gina(?) | ||
qŏqu | rain | kō(?) | kŏku | wu | |
qùne | slicing knife | kùne | kùre | uni | |
gʷàda nŏda | Heaven; spiritual paradise | gadanŏda | vadarŏda | latanuta | |
hʷonùbu | torch | honùbu | forùbu | hunupu | |
kulagʷī | step; stair | kulagī | tulavī | kulali | |
ăpmi | woman; female | àmi | ami | ||
hʷèdu | duck (bird) | hèdu | fèdu | hitu | |
hʷeyahʷŭm[6] | dolphin | sāhun(?) | fāfū (?) | sagu | |
ùqi | eye | ù | ùki | wi | |
hʷō | fire | hō | fō | hu | |
hʷiă | love | să | fyá | sa | |
nŭbu | fruit that grows on trees | nŭbu | rŭbu | nupu |
Notes
- ↑ There is one more nation, just north of Litila, which is not labeled on any map, either in the ~4100 AD era or the ~8700 AD era.
- ↑ given as lonŏmĩ in red dict
- ↑ from a parent langaueg from given as bebhŭpo in red dict
- ↑ Same as papsa
- ↑ Check this. This is either an error or a very rare tone-changing sound shift.
- ↑ given as fe-afŭm in red dict. Not cognate to the word for breast.