Pulqer/History: Difference between revisions
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** ''ą > au'' /ɑː/ | ** ''ą > au'' /ɑː/ | ||
** ''u > ue'' /uː/ | ** ''u > ue'' /uː/ | ||
* /au/ merges with /ɑː/ < L. ''o'', e.g. ''auru > auru'' /ɑːru/ | * /au/ merges with /ɑː/ < L. ''o'', e.g. ''auru > auru'' /ɑːru/; short ''ą'' merges with ''a''. | ||
* All other unstressed internal vowels are lost between stressed syllables, wherever possible, e.g. ''aumine > aunne'' | * All other unstressed internal vowels are lost between stressed syllables, wherever possible, e.g. ''aumine > aunne'' | ||
* Syllabic liquids ''ḷ, ṛ'' develop between other consonants, e.g. ''sacramentum > sakhṛmentu'' | * Syllabic liquids ''ḷ, ṛ'' develop between other consonants, e.g. ''sacramentum > sakhṛmentu'' |
Revision as of 15:11, 8 April 2020
- Analogical levelling of irregular forms or substitution by diminutives etc, e.g. auris > auricula > oricla.
Vulgar Latin Changes
The following changes were underway already in Vulgar Latin when it reached Jacques in 3rd century:
- Syncope of unstressed vowels adjacent to glides, e.g. solidus > soldus.
- Change of prevocalic /e, i/ > /j/, e.g. filia > filja.
- Merger of /b, w/ as allophonic /b ~ β/, e.g. vivo > bibo.
- Loss of h, e.g. hominem > ominem.
- Loss of final consonants, e.g. mūrum > mūru.
- Assimilation of ns > s with compensatory lengthening, e.g. mensa > mēsa > mẹsa
- Loss of vowel quantity
- Palatalisation of all consonants before /j/, e.g. ratione > ratsjone
- Palatalisation of c, g before i, e.g. cippus > tsippu
Old Pulqer Changes
A number of fundamental changes between Latin and Old Pulqer are believed to have happened almost immediately as a result of Kelt speakers learning Latin imperfectly.
- High mid vowels ẹ, ọ merge with high vowels i, u, e.g. mesa > misa, dracọ > trakku
- Low-mid ǫ becomes:
- u anywhere that i, u follow in the next syllable, e.g. homine > umine
- ą /ɑ/ elsewhere, e.g. rota > arątha
- Chain shift in which voiced plosives become unaspirated voiceless plosives and voiceless plosives become aspirated voiceless plosives, e.g. cadere > khatere
- b > p > ph
- d > t > th
- g > k > kh
- qu > qh
- Affricate /d͡ʒ/ (from L. j, gi) becomes /t͡ʃ/.
- Voiced fricatives /z/ and /β/ (from intervocalic allophones of s, v, b) are devoiced to /s/ and /ɸ/, the latter merging with f, e.g. vinu > finu, bibere > pifere
- Assimilation of consonant clusters, e.g. octō > uttu
- mn > nn
- ct > tt
- x /ks/ > ss
- Prothesis before word-initial r- or sC-, e.g. rẹge > arike, stella > astella
The following are later developments within OP.
- Stressed open vowels are lengthened, later diphthongised e.g. car'tate > kharthaethe
- a > ae /ɛː/
- e > ei /ɛi/
- i > ie /iː/
- ą > au /ɑː/
- u > ue /uː/
- /au/ merges with /ɑː/ < L. o, e.g. auru > auru /ɑːru/; short ą merges with a.
- All other unstressed internal vowels are lost between stressed syllables, wherever possible, e.g. aumine > aunne
- Syllabic liquids ḷ, ṛ develop between other consonants, e.g. sacramentum > sakhṛmentu
Middle Pulqer Changes
- Geminate resonants (ll, rr, nn, mm) are preoccluded (> tl, tr, tn, pm, e.g. khapallu > khapatlu.
- Final vowels are lost, e.g. mueru > muer
- f becomes h, e.g. filtś > hiltś
- Remaining geminate consonants simplified, e.g. khatth > khath
- r and l become unstable, the former usually preferred in pre-vocalic position and the latter in post-vocalic position, e.g. phlutś > phrutś.
Modern Pulqer Changes
- Loss of vowel quantity, e.g. autn > atn
- ae > e
- ei > i
- ie > i
- au > a
- ue > u
- Aspirated stops merge with unaspirated (th, kh, ph > t, k, p), e.g. khath > kat.
- Development of epenthetic vowel y /ə/, e.g. kapatl > kapatyl