Subumpamese languages
The Subumpamese languages are the languages spoken in the eleven states of Subumpam. They split off from the parent language, called Tapilula, around 600 AD and continued to be spoken until the defeat of Subumpam in the Vegetable War of 2668 AD.
Early history
Update notes
- NOTE, THIS WILL BE REWORKED HEAVILY SOON, TO THE POINT OF STARTEING FROM SCREATCH. MOST NOTES ARE ON PAPER ONLY NOW.
Proto-Subumpamese will be a "Raspberry Wine" type of language, with heavy reliance on coarticulated consonants, both labial and palatal. First stage of vowel shifts is on paper only and mostly resembles Gold except for the lack of loss of /e o/.
Second stage vowel shifts is nearly or entirely unconditional: /e/ > /i/ (thus phonemicizing palatalized consonants), followed by a pullchain of /o/ > /ə/ > /u/. This produces the exact same four-vowel system found in Gold: /a i u ə/. However, Proto-Subumpamese treats the schwa as a full vowel, since it comes from primordial /o/, and therefore the Subumpamese vowel system is more balanced.
Proto-Subumpamese evolves several unusual consonants. First off, the primordial /f/ changes to /ṗ/, a voiceless labiodental stop. (Note that the symbol ṗ usually indicates a completely different sound; this use is specific to Subumpamese.) Then it 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.
Initial phonology
Proto-Subumpamese split off from the Gold branch of the Tapilula family around the year 600 AD. At this time, the only other Gold speakers were those living in Paba; those who settled Nama spoke different languages. Proto-Subumpamese had already gone through all of the vowel changes that characterized the Gold language of the year 1900. Therefore, the vowel inventories of Gold and proto-Subumpamese are identical and in nearly all words they will agree with each other, despite the 1300-year gap between their maturation dates.
However, proto-Subumpamese branched off from Gold before the deletion of all word-initial vowels, and therefore there are some words that were one syllable longer in proto-Subumpamese than in Gold. This also means that proto-Subumpamese retained the Tapilula noun classifier system, which in the Gold branch was wrecked by the deletion of initial vowels. Subumpamese also lacks the labialized consonants that were created by this shift, although it preserves the unusual labialized alveolars that came down from Tapilula.
Note that the vowel changes above are responsible for the growth of closed syllables, and that proto-Subumpamese therefore has closed syllables wherever Gold also has them.
The only consonant change that occurred between Tapilula and proto-Subumpamese was the palatalization of /k/ (not /ḳ/) before /i/. All of the other changes that came to characterize the Gold language occurred after the split.
Therefore the consonant phonology of proto-Subumpamese was almost identical to that of Tapilula:
/p b m f t d n l tʷ dʷ nʷ č j k ḳ ŋ h g hʷ gʷ/
Of note is that /gʷ/ was very frequently pronounced [w] but patterned as if it were a labiovelar. The only ejective in the language is ḳ. The only affricate is /č/, and it mostly occurs before [i].
Early divisions
All Subumpamese languages shared the change of short /i/ > /yi/ unconditionally, thus palatalizing all consonants before every short /i/.[1] This sound change was independent of tone. All Subumpamese languages can also be said to share the unconditional sound change of /ḳ/ > /q/, but in many cases, the pronunciation varied allophonically and it merely followed the same patterns of development. This sound change created clusters of /kq/ and /qk/, which both changed to /qq/ in all languages.
p
Rework the vowel shifts. Make the Gold vowel shifts and the Submissive ones descended from a parent form which b's less losselosses than either.
K> ć k kw when touching ieaou in either direction. Tw preserved, t>č t tw same pattern
Use paper charts for vowel changes, but /e o/ are preserved in some situations where they went to /a/ in gold. Also, e.g. ae vs ai
Vuʒi
After these first few changes, the Vuʒi language split off from the rest. This language marked the westernmost limit of the Zenith people during the entire period of Subumpam's existence. At the time of the split, Vuʒi did not have an /s/.
After the loss of Vuʒi, the remaining Subumpamese peoples continued to speak a single common language. The next sound change was the fronting of all velar consonants before the sound /y/ (including /yi/). Note that this did not occur before long /ī/ because the long /ī/ had never triggered palatalization in the first place.maybe : ) Coronals were not affected by this change.
- NOTE, this makes even the k>č change redundant, meaning there were effectively zero consonant changes between Tap and Proto-Sub.
Next, all long /ū/ changed to /wū/, thus labializing any consonants that occurred before it.
Then, the four diphthongs /ai au əi əu/ changed unconditionally to /ē ō ī ū/.
The next change shifted the labial sounds /hʷ gʷ/ to /f v/ unconditionally. Thus, at this point, around 1100 AD, Subumpamese did not have a /w/ despite having labialized consonants. This soon changed because the lateral approximant /l/ came to be pronounced /w/ in all positions. (NOTE: This was probably timed to line up with Pabappa, but now it cannot.)
Then, all long vowels in closed syllables became short and low-toned.
East-West split
At this point the Subumpamese people began to work more closely together and form multinational alliances instead of each nation considering itself independent. However, each nation tended to pair with nations to its north or south, and take less influence from nations to their east or west. This was due to the river systems in Subumpam, which flowed down from a mountain range in the far north of Subumpam. Thus the next division within the Subumpamese language family was a three-way split between Western, Central, and Eastern Subumpam. The Eastern branch split off from the other two slightly earlier than the other two split from each other, but for simplicity the split can be analyzed as simultaneous.
In Western Subumpamese territory, there came to be four languages, one for each of the four states at the western end of the Subumpamese Union. These were Mania, Yuez, Yuenan, and a second language that was spoken in Vuʒi.
In Central Subumpamese, there was only a single language. This was spoken in the capital territory of Subumpam, whose name is Bipabum. It was the most politically powerful of all of the Subumpamese languages and was the language often called simply "Subumpamese" by diplomats traveling overseas.
In Eastern Subumpamese, there were four languages, again one for each nation. These were Nī, Vuʒinī, Puripup, and Pipaippis. These languages were strongly influenced by Pabappa. Note that the Subumpamese states of Punsam and Pombi did not have their own languages because they were originally part of Paba and their peoples' native language was Pabappa.
Phonology of Common Subumpamese
The phonology of the three major proto-languages was little changed from that of proto-Subumpamese. There was still no phonemic /s/. Every consonant had a labialized form, but most of these had an unusual distribution, occurring exclusively before [u] in a heavy syllable. Ignoring the labialized forms, the consonant inventory of Common Subumpamese was:
/p b m f v w t d n č š ž ñ j k q ŋ h g/
And the vowel inventory was
/a e i o u ə/
However, although tone was still phonemic, the [e] and [o] vowels occurred mostly on the long high tone, that is, /ē/ and /ō/.
Changes unique to Central Subumpamese
The starting consonant inventory was:
/p b m f v w þ t d n č š ž ñ j k q ŋ h g/
The labialized coronals tʷ dʷ nʷ became the velars kʷ kʷ ŋʷ.
Then, Central Subumpamese shifted the postalveolar consonants č š ž ñ forward to become the alveolars c s z n. Thus phonemic /s/ was created. Note, however, that these consonants occurred primarily before the vowel [i], and thus had a limited distribution.
Next, the voiced stop d changed unconditionally to /r/. This change was blocked after a nasal, but the spelling changed as if the shift had occurred, since there were no minimal pairs.
Next, all syllable-final /ʕ/ changed to /g/.
Then, voiceless stops and fricatives became voiced after a low tone or a long falling vowel. Thus word-final /z/ was created, since the previous long tones like īs had become ĭs and now ĭz.
Then, [e] and [o] became short in all positions.
Then, all labialized consonants became labialized labials, and these quickly became plain labials.
Next, all of the velar consonants were doubly fronted to alveolars: /k h g ŋ/ became /c s z n/. The uvular stop /q/ was not affected by this shift; it had become [k] by this time, but was distinguished by behavior.
Syllable-final /z/ (which had been created by the last shift) now changed to [j], which was considered an allophone of /i/. Likewise, syllable-final /c/ (which had also been created by the last shift) changed to /t/ except in a few words in internal position where it remained before another postalveolar.
The sequences /ei ou/ became /ē ō/ unconditionally.
Tones were eliminated.
Syllable-final /u/ shifted unconditionally to /m/.
Changes unique to Eastern Subumpamese
Proto-Eastern Subumpamese made early use of mergers and reduced the size of its phonology. Its starting consonant inventory was:
/p b m f v w t d n č š ž ñ j k q ŋ h g/
And any of these could be labialized.
The labialized coronals tʷ dʷ nʷ became the labials pʷ bʷ mʷ.
The vowel /u/ shifted to /ə/ unconditionally, except if after a labialized consonant. Thus primordial /ū/ is distinct from primordial /u/.
Labialization was lost on all consonants.
The next change after this one was the unconditional fronting of all velars into alveolars: /k h g ŋ/ became /c s z n/. The uvular stop /q/ was moved up to become /š/, leaving the language entirely without dorsal consonants. There were also no liquid consonants.
High tones develop into syllable-final /ʔ/, which interacts with the next consonant when there is one. Then, tones are eliminated.
Daughter languages of Eastern Subumpamese
Proto-Eastern Subumpamese had no /l/ or /r/ sounds. Its starting phonology was, for consonants:
/p b m f v w t d n c s z š j/
[č] is considered to be /tš/.
The vowel setup was
/a e i o u ə/
With the schwa being more common than in most related languages.
Vuʒinī
This language develops vowel hiatus early on and keeps the hiatus rather than forming new diphthongs.
- /z d/ > /l r/
Puripup
- /v z/ > /0 0/
- /b d/ > /ʋ r/ (spelled /v r/) except in word-initial position or after a nasal
- /ʔp ʔt/ > /ṗ ṭ/ <--- these might actually be clicks, if the people of Puripup had some contact with Baeba Swamp.
- /mp mb nt nd/ > /b b d d/
- /ə/ > /0/
- All voiceless stops become seen as fundamentally aspirated now.
Pipaippis
This lanuage is also known as Dabbazine, where e spells /ə/. Tapilula was Dàwadĭnu.
- /ʔf ʔv/ > /pp bb/
- /ʔc ʔs ʔz ʔš/ > /c c ʒ č/
- /f v/ > /p b/ in word-initial position.
- /f v/ > /w w/ in any remaining positions. (May be spelled v.)
- /d/ > /z/ in medial position
- /z/ > /0/
- /e o/ > /jə wə/ (not əi əu? This is intended to mimic contemporary Pabappa.)
- Other vowel sequences caused by the loss of d z also contract, whenever possible, into rising diphthongs.
- /c ʒ č/ > /s z š/.
- Sequences of consonant + /w/ become labialized consonants; sequences of consonant + /j/ become palatalized consonants.
- /tʷ dʷ nʷ/ > /k ġ ŋ/.
- Labialization was removed on all consonants. Palatalization stays.
Nī
- /f/ > /h/
- /z/ > /l/ unconditionally, therefore restoring /l/.
- /p t/ > /pʰ tʰ/
- /b d/ > /p t/
- /v/ > /b/
- All schwas deleted.
- Grassman's Law.
CHanges unique to Western Subumpamese
The initial phonology here was
/p b m f v w t d n č š ž ñ j k q ŋ h g/
for consonants and /a e i o u ə/ for vowels. The language lacked /s/ and also did not have /l/ or /r/. Syllables could end in a nasal or one of /f k q/. The reflex of the high tone added a final [ʔ] to an open syllable, and it is treated here as if it were a separate phoneme for convenience. (Note: /f/ might be an error; it was for sure /h/ at an earlier date.)
- /k q/ > /p/ before a coronal consonant.
- Voiceless stops are deaspirated.
- /č š ž ñ/ > /c s z n/
- /pt/ > /ps/
- /ʔp ʔt ʔk ʔq/ > /pp tt kk qq/
- /ʔf ʔv ʔc ʔs ʔz ʔh ʔg/ > /pf pf c c c kʰ kʰ/
- /pf c/ > /pʰ s/
vuji
Dentalz2 from tw etc. D to r.
Interaction with other languages
Note that the maturation dates of all nine languages are set at 1900AD, which is contemporary with the split between Pabappa and Khulls. Thus, at this time, there were ten languages in the Gold Empire: the nine Subumpamese languages, which were spoken in Subumpam, and the monolithic Khulls/Pabappa dialect complex, which covered the entire remainder of the empire.
Notes
- ↑ This might be a mistake, it could be before all [i] including the long ones.