Kava/sound changes: Difference between revisions

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===Sound changes unique to proto-Kava===
===Proto-Subumpamese (???) to Proto-Kava (1900)===
This section is presented separately because it is needed by the spreadsheet and may be useful for loanwords. It ends at 1700 AD, a time of no political significance for [[Kava]] but near the time of greater significance for the areas around Kava.
Proto-Subumpamese had the consonants
 
Bilabials:      p  b  m  f  w
Alveolars:      t  d  n      l
Palatals:                      y
Velars:    ḳ  k  ġ  ŋ  h  g
 
Each of which could be palatalized and/or labialized. The velars could also appear as prevelars.


# Three-way merger of ṁ ṅ ŋ̇ as /ən/. (later /un/)  
# Three-way merger of ṁ ṅ ŋ̇ as /ən/. (later /un/)  

Revision as of 10:58, 17 October 2018

Proto-Subumpamese (???) to Proto-Kava (1900)

Proto-Subumpamese had the consonants

Bilabials:      p   b   m   f   w
Alveolars:      t   d   n       l
Palatals:                       y
Velars:     ḳ   k   ġ   ŋ   h   g

Each of which could be palatalized and/or labialized. The velars could also appear as prevelars.

  1. Three-way merger of ṁ ṅ ŋ̇ as /ən/. (later /un/)
  2. > q.
  3. kq qk > qq.
  4. xhʷ > .
  5. śʷ s̀ʷ > . These sounds when a primordial /h/ sound was both palatalized and labialized. Although there was no plain counterpart, this /sʷ/ sound still retained its labialization.
  6. ə > u.
  7. 'e o > i ə. (thus phonemicizing palatalized consonants) This produces the exact same four-vowel system found in Gold: /a i u ə/.
  8. [i] > [ə] if touching a Q in eihte direction.
  9. Primordial f > p (spelled /ṗ/ in wordlists).
  10. Primordial hʷ w > f v.

Proto-Kava evolves a post-palatal stop and fricative, and also a postvelar (but not uvular) stop. Thus it could be said that there are three "k" sounds: front, middle, and back. However, all Subumpamese daughter languages shift the consonant inventory strongly towards the front, resulting in a family of languages that sound somewhat like watered-down Pabappa.

  • All of this happened while there still was not an /s/ in the language, which was one of the triggers for the very strong frontward shift. At one point, early proto-Subumapmese had a voiceless fricative inventory consisting of /fʷ ś s̀ x h/ but no [s], even allophonically. All five of these had originated simply as allophones of [h]. There was also a corresponding voiced series.

Proto-Subumpamese can be stated to have been spoken around 1700 AD, not 1200 AD as its short sound c hange list might imply.

Therefore the consonant phonology of proto-Kava (~1700 AD?) was:

Bilabials:              p  b  m  
Rounded bilabials:      pʷ bʷ mʷ fʷ w
Alveolars:              t  d  n  l 
Rounded alveolars:      tʷ dʷ nʷ lʷ
Palatalized alveolars:  č  ǯ  ň  ł
Palatals:               ć     ń  ś  ź  y
Prevelars:              c̀     ŋ̀  s̀  z̀
Velars:                 k     ŋ  x  g
Labialized velars:      kʷ    ŋʷ 
Postvelars:             q        h
Labialized postvelars:  qʷ
  

Note: /ň/ = /ñ/; the latter's used because the former isnt on all keyboards.

There still was not an [s], even as an allophone.