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Aquan languages: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "The '''Aqual languages''' are a hypothetical language family proposed by Jörg Rhiemeier. The languages are all extinct and unattested, leaving only trac...")
 
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Revision as of 09:27, 22 June 2012

The Aqual languages are a hypothetical language family proposed by Jörg Rhiemeier. The languages are all extinct and unattested, leaving only traces in other languages, mainly in form of the Old European hydronymy. The name "Aqual" is derived from Latin aqua 'water', a word that is limited to the westernmost branches of Indo-European (Italic, Celtic and Germanic) and also occurs in the Old European hydronymy, and may have been the Aqual common term for a watercourse.

According to Rhiemeier, the Aqual languages were spoken in Neolithic Central and Western Europe and related to the Indo-European family (see Europic). Proto-Aqual may have been spoken around 5000 BC by the people whose archaeological remains are known as the Linear Pottery culture. From there, the languages were carried north by the Funnel Beaker and west by the Bell Beaker peoples. The last holdout of Aqual languages may have been in the British Isles, where these languages may have been the substratum responsible for the "un-Indo-European" appearance of the Insular Celtic languages.

The Aqual languages seem to preserve some archaic features of an ancestor of Proto-Indo-European, such as a three-vowel system (*/a i u/) without ablaut, and a more agglutinating morphology. Substratal evidence from the Insular Celtic languages may indicate that the insular branch, at least, may have been head-initial and active/stative, with a tendency to phonologically run together syntactically closely associated words (such as noun and adjective within a noun phrase).

Aqual conlangs

Jörg Rhiemeier explores the lost world of the Aqual languages speculatively in his Hesperic conlang family within the framework of the League of Lost Languages.