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Old High Jermench (MGR)

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Proto-Northern-Romance
*Jermānēc / *Roumānēc / Lingua Rūstica Germāniārum
Spoken in: northwestern Europe
Conworld: Mundus Germaniae Romanae
Total speakers: unknown
Genealogical classification: Indo-European
Romance
Italo-Northwestern-Romance
Proto-Northern-Romance
Basic word order: SVO
Morphological type: inflecting
Morphosyntactic alignment: nominative-accusative
Writing system:
Created by:
P Collier, BP Jonsson 2006+

Introduction

Modern Descendants












Phonology

Consonants


Consonants
Bilabial Labiodental Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive p   b ¹ t   d ¹ k   g ¹
Fricative     β ¹ f     θ   ð ¹ s x   ɣ ¹ h
Approximant w j
Trill r
Lateral l

¹The stop allophones occured in initial position or when geminated. In other positions b d and g are realised as fricatives.


Vowels


Vowels
Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
High
Near-high ɪ ʊ
High-mid e
Low-mid ɛ   ɛː ɔ   ɔː
Low a   aː


Phonological History

Morphology

Note with regard to spelling:

The written language of the literate Roman inhabitants of Germania was Classical Latin. Proto-Northern Romance was never transcribed, but rather was the local spoken dialect of Vulgar Latin.

As any spelling of Proto-Northern Romance is purely hypothetical, it allows a certain freedom when transcribing the language. For this reason, and ease of reading, modern spelling conventions are used in transcribing the semivowels /j/ and /w/ and those sounds not present in Classical Latin.

/j/       j
/w/       w
/θ/       th
/ð/       dh
/x/       ch

The Proto-Northern Romance phoneme /b/ was pronounced either as frictaive [β] or stop [b], depending on position (see phonology). Both allophones here are transcribed as b. Similarly /g/, which could be [ɣ] or [g], is transcribed as g.


Nouns

Latin's seven case system had reduced to four in Proto-Northern Romance – nominative, accusative, genitive and dative.

The neuter gender was lost, neuter nouns on the whole being reanalysed as masculine.


1st Declension

Group I

Mainly feminine, with some masculine exceptions. Derived from Latin 1st and 5th declensions.

1st Declension – Group I
Singular Plural
Nominative – a – as
Accusative – a – as
Genitive – ā – ār
Dative – ā – īs

The following Latin paradigms decline per the above (starred forms are presumed/attested in Vulgar Latin):

  • terra, terrae
  • *dia, *diae (< *diēs, diēī)
  • *Aenēa, Aenēae (< *Aenēas, Aenēae)
  • *Anchīsa, Anchīsae (< *Anchīses, Anchīsae)


Group II

Feminine. Derived from Latin 1st declension.

1st Declension – Group II
Singular Plural
Nominative – as
Accusative – as
Genitive – s – ār
Dative – ā – īs

The following Latin paradigm declines per the above:

  • crambē, crambes


2nd Declension

Group I

Masculine, including originally neuter Latin nouns. Derived from Latin 3rd declension.

2nd Declension – Group I
Singular Plural
Nominative – ī
Accusative – s
Genitive – s – ōr
Dative – ī – īs

The following Latin paradigms decline per the above:

  • rēte, rētis
  • pater, patris
  • *nōme, nōminis (< nōmen, nōminis)
  • opus, operis


Group II

Masculine, including originally feminine Latin nouns. Derived from Latin 3rd declension.

2nd Declension – Group II
Singular Plural
Nominative – s – ī
Accusative – s
Genitive – s – ōr
Dative – ī – īs

The following Latin paradigms decline per the above:'

  • amnis, amnis
  • *animālis, *animālis (< animāl, animālīs)
  • *amantis, amantis (< amans, amantis)
  • *ossus, ossis (< os, ossis)
  • *āeris, āeris (< āēr, āeris)
  • *hērōis, hērōis (< hērōs, hērōis)
  • *Periclis, Periclis (<Periclēs, Periclis)
  • *poēmatis, poēmatis (< poēma, poēmatis)


Group III

Masculine, including originally feminine or neuter Latin nouns. Derived from Latin 2nd and 4th declensions.

2nd Declension – Group III
Singular Plural
Nominative – s – ī
Accusative – s
Genitive – ī – ōr
Dative – īs

The following Latin paradigms decline per the above:

  • modus, modī
  • Lūcius, Lūcī
  • *Dēlus, Dēlī (< Dēlos, Dēlī)
  • *dōnus, dōnī (< dōnum, dōnī)
  • portus, *portī (< portus, portūs)
  • *genūus, *genuī (< genū, genūs)


Group IV

Masculine, including originally feminine Latin nouns. Derived from Latin 2nd declension.

2nd Declension – Group IV
Singular Plural
Nominative – ī
Accusative – s
Genitive – ī – ōr
Dative – īs

The following Latin paradigms decline per the above:

  • liber, librī
  • puer, puerī


3rd Declension

Feminine, including originally masculine Latin nouns. Derived from Latin 3rd and 5th declensions.

4th Declension
Singular Plural
Nominative – s – s
Accusative – s
Genitive – s
Dative – ī – ius

The following Latin paradigms decline per the above

  • *clādis, clādis (< clādēs, clādis)
  • *urbis, urbis (< urbs, urbis)
  • *laudis, laudis (< laus, laudis)
  • *aetātis, aetātis (< aetās, aetātis)
  • rēs, *reis (< rēs, reī)
  • *Naiadis, Naiadis (< Naias, Naiadis)
  • *mōris, mōris (< mōs, mōris)
  • *ratiōnis, ratiōnis (< ratiō, ratiōnis)


Pronouns

Pronouns
Singular Plural
masculine feminine reflexive impersonal masculine feminine reflexive
1st person Nominative nus
Accusative mei nus
Genitive mīs ma nōster (nōstra)
Dative nous
2nd person Nominative wus
Accusative tei wus
Genitive tus ta wōster (wōstra)
Dative wous
3rd person Nominative el ella hōm illī ellas
Accusative sei hōm(m) sei
Genitive sus sa hōms ellour
Dative hōmmī
Interrogative
& relative
Nominative
Accusative cea cus quas
Genitive cjus quājas cour quār
Dative quā cius


Verbs

In the transition from Latin to Proto-Northern Romance, verbs went through several syntactic and semantic changes. Most of the distinctions present in classical Latin continued to be made, but synthetic forms were often replaced with analytic ones. Other verb forms changed meaning, and new forms also appeared.

In common with the other Romance dialects, Latin's synthetic passive voice was completely lost, to be replaced by a periphrastic form utilising the appropriately conjugated form of the verb 'to be' plus the past participle.

Similar new periphrastic forms also developed for the future tense, utilising the verb 'to come' plus the infinitive, and the perfect tense, using 'to have' and the past participle.

Latin's perfect tense had also functioned as a preterite (simple past). Following the development of a new periphrastic perfect tense (see above), use of the original perfect form continued but became limited solely to its preterite meaning.

Latin's imperfect tense was completely lost in Proto-Northern Romance.


Indicative Mood

1st Conjugation
Present
Singular Plural
1st person – āms
2nd person – as – āts
3rd Person – at – ant


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person – aj – aums
2nd person – astī – asts
3rd Person – aut – ārnt


A small group of 1st conjugation verbs, primarily those with stems ending in – d, formed their preterite indicative differently:

Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person ...d – ī ...d – eims
2nd person ...d – istī ...d – ists
3rd Person ...d – ūt ...d – eirnt


2nd Conjugation
Present
Singular Plural
1st person – eims
2nd person – s – eits
3rd Person – t – nt


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person – wī – weims
2nd person – wistī – wists
3rd Person – ūt – weirnt


3rd Conjugation
Present
Singular Plural
1st person – ms
2nd person – s – ts
3rd Person – t – nt


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person – si – sims
2nd person – sistī – sists
3rd Person – sit – seirnt


4th Conjugation
Present
Singular Plural
1st person – īms
2nd person – īs – ītīs
3rd Person – t – nt


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person – i – iums
2nd person – istī – īsts
3rd Person – iut – īrnt


Subjunctive Mood

1st Conjugation
Present
Singular Plural
1st person – eims
2nd person – s – eits
3rd Person – t – nt


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person – wiss – auseims
2nd person – wiss – auseits
3rd Person – wisst – wissant


2nd Conjugation
Present
Singular Plural
1st person –a – āms
2nd person – as – āts
3rd Person – at – ant


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person – wiss – wisseims
2nd person – wiss – wisseits
3rd Person – wisst – wissant


3rd Conjugation
Present
Singular Plural
1st person –a – āms
2nd person – as – āts
3rd Person – at – ant


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person – iss – isseims
2nd person – iss – isseits
3rd Person – isst – issant


4th Conjugation
Present
Singular Plural
1st person –a – āms
2nd person – as – āts
3rd Person – at – ant


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person – wiss – iuseims
2nd person – wiss – iuseits
3rd Person – wisst – wissant


Imperative Mood

Singular
1st Conjugation – a
2nd Conjugation – ei
3rd Conjugation – ea
4th Conjugation – ei


Plural
1st Conjugation – āt
2nd Conjugation – eit
3rd Conjugation – eit
4th Conjugation – īt


Infinitive and Past Participles

Infinitive
1st Conjugation – ār
2nd Conjugation – eir
3rd Conjugation – ar
4th Conjugation – īr


Perfect Past Participle (Supine)
1st Conjugation cun – āt
2nd Conjugation cun – ūt
3rd Conjugation cun – t
4th Conjugation cun – īt


Passive Past Participle
Masculine Feminine
1st Conjugation cun – āts cun – āta
2nd Conjugation cun – ūts cun – ūta
3rd Conjugation cun – ts cun – ta
4th Conjugation cun – īts cun – īts

During the Proto-Northern Romance period the past particples increasingly came to be prefixed with *cun- (from the Latin verbal prefix con-). The precise semantic purpose of the prefix is unclear, although it clearly served to differentiate the past participles from other verb forms. It is possible the use of such a prefix had its origins in the pre-Roman languages of the Germanian tribes.

The passive participle agrees with the gender of the patient.


Auxilliary Verbs

*Esttar (to be)

Present
Singular Plural
1st person *su *soums
2nd person *es *ests
3rd Person *est *sunt


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person *thwī *thoums
2nd person *thustī *thusts
3rd Person *thut *thournt

*Esttar was used in conjunction with a passive participle to create the passive voice.

The passive participle agrees in gender with the patient. For example, *ella est cunāmāta (she is loved), *el thut cundāts (it was given).


*Hābeir (to have)

Present
Singular Plural
1st person *hāb *hābeims
2nd person *hābs *hābeits
3rd Person *haut *haunt


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person *houwī *houweims
2nd person *houwistī *houwists
3rd Person *houwt *houweirnt

The present tense of *hābeir was used in conjunction with a past participle to create the perfect: *jo hāb cunthout (I have been).

The preterite of *hābeir was used in conjunction with a past participle to create the pluperfect: *wus houweims cunwint (we had come).


*Weanīr (to come)

Present
Singular Plural
1st person *wean *weanīms
2nd person *weanīs *weanītīs
3rd Person *weant *weannt


Preterite (Simple Past)
Singular Plural
1st person *weinwi *weinweims
2nd person *weinwistī *weinwists
3rd Person *weinūt *weinweirnt

The present tense of *weanīr was used in conjunction with an infinitive to create the future: *tū weanīs indūccar (you will lead).

The preterite of *weanīr was used in conjunction with an infinitive to create the conditional (i.e. 'future-in-the-past): *jo weinwi ferdhounār (I would forgive).