Talsmic languages: Difference between revisions
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===Verbal morphology=== | ===Verbal morphology=== | ||
====Thematic suffixes==== | ====Thematic suffixes==== | ||
Proto-Talsmic saw the development of thematic vowels from derivational suffixes. | Proto-Talsmic saw the development of thematic vowels from derivational suffixes. Thematic vowels are found in many Talsmic languages, but modern languages often generalize one thematic vowel to the expense of the others. | ||
*''*-īn'': | *''*-īn'': basic verbs | ||
*''*-a-īn'': denominative or transitive verbs | *''*-a-īn'': denominative or transitive verbs | ||
*''*-e-īn'': dynamic or reflexive verbs | *''*-e-īn'': dynamic or reflexive verbs | ||
====TAM/subject affix paradigm==== | ====TAM/subject affix paradigm==== |
Revision as of 02:10, 5 April 2014
The Talsmic languages are a relatively isolated subbranch of the Zachydic language family; with Raxic they form the Raxo-Talsmic subfamily. They are descended from Proto-Talsmic (PT or PTal).
Characteristics
The historical Talsmic languages have all shared the following characteristics to some extent:
- lack of inflectional case
- rigidly head-initial word order
- verb-initial clauses
- heavy grammatical use of pronominal suffixes/enclitics on possessed nouns, verbs and prepositions, that index their dependents
- some languages use bare possessum forms.
- differential indexing of the direct object and the possessor, and occasionally the prepositional object
- grammatical apophony (tonal, vocalic or consonantal)
- word order changes for topicalization and focusing
- prominence of tense rather than aspect in verbal TAM, unlike in mainland Zachydic languages.
Characteristic phylogenetic innovations vis-à-vis Zachydic include:
- Loss of final vowels/case endings.
- Rhotacization of /*z/ to /*r/ V_V, and secondary rhotacization (often before consonants, the choice of which depends on the language).
- Development of Proto-Zachydic ejective stops into aspirated stops, which often fricativize in daughter languages.
- Assibilation of affricates occuring after primary rhotacization (/*cʼ, *c/ > /*s/, /*ʒ/ > /*z/ etc.) greatly reduces the consonant inventory; this also contributes to the fricative-rich flavor of Talsmic.
- Also common is the transition of the uvular series into the radical series; uvulars are still found in some phonetically conservative languages and dialects, however.
Proto-Talsmic phonology
The following is the Proto-Talsmic sound system as reconstructed by Talsmicist Dàžiir pyr Chlìesa.
Consonant inventory
Proto-Talsmic reconstructed consonants | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |||
Nasal | *m | *n | ||||||
Plosive | voiceless | *p | *t | *c | *k | *q | *ʔ | |
voiced | *b | *d | *ɟ | *g | ||||
aspirated | *pʰ | *tʰ | *cʰ | *kʰ | *qʰ | |||
Fricative | voiceless | *s | *ç | *h | ||||
voiced | *z | *ƶ | *ʁ | |||||
Approximant | *w | *j | ||||||
Trill | *r | |||||||
Lateral app. | *l |
/qʰ/ may have been realized as an affricate, [qχ].
Vocalic inventory
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | *i *ī | *u *ū | |
Mid | *e *ē | *o *ō | |
Open | *a *ā |
Phonotactics
The maximal syllable structure was CCGVCC, where G was a glide.
CC- could be comprised of:
- [not glide][liquid/glide]
- [voiceless obstruent][voiceless obstruent]
- [voiced obstruent][voiced obstruent]
-CC could maximally be sonorant + obstruent or obstruent + obstruent. -CC was only permitted word-finally.
Proto-Talsmic grammar
Nominal morphology
Nouns and adjectives had retained from Proto-Zachydic 6 cases (nominative, accusative, genitive/prepositional, allative, ablative, locative/instrumental), 3 numbers, 2 genders (masculine, feminine), and additionally possessive inflection for nouns. Like its daughter languages as well as Proto-Zachydic, Common Talsmic is thought to have been a differential object marking language; only definite or specific direct objects were marked with the accusative case.
[Genitive is partitive > indefinite?]
*çúma=ʔ 'air' | *méisar 'segment' | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gender → | Masculine | Feminine | ||||||||||
Case ↓ | Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | ||||||
Nominative | *çúma | *çúmōr | *çúmūç | *méisar | *méisoir | *méisāne | ||||||
Accusative | *çúmeç | *çúmōç | *çúmūt | *méisaç | *méisoiç | *méisina | ||||||
Genitive/Prepositional | *çúmu | *çúmār | *çúmakʰe | *méiset | *méisair | *méis(in)ir | ||||||
Ablative | ||||||||||||
Allative | ? | ? | ||||||||||
Instrumental/Locative | *çúmīl | *méisai |
The essive case (*-ēr) was marginal, and was only used adverbially (cf. Th. -ēr adverbial suffix).
Some nouns took the "thematic" suffix/clitic *-ʔ with an uncertain meaning, a holdover from the classifier system in Proto-Zachydic.
Pronominal morphology
Proto-Talsmic free pronouns can be reconstructed with less confidence because all case marking except as clitics and suffixes was eliminated.
Full personal pronouns
Possessive suffixes
Verbal morphology
Thematic suffixes
Proto-Talsmic saw the development of thematic vowels from derivational suffixes. Thematic vowels are found in many Talsmic languages, but modern languages often generalize one thematic vowel to the expense of the others.
- *-īn: basic verbs
- *-a-īn: denominative or transitive verbs
- *-e-īn: dynamic or reflexive verbs
TAM/subject affix paradigm
Other verbal affixes
Other reconstructible affixes include:
- the memory evidential prefix *ʔṇʔ-.
- -va-, passive suffix.
Syntax
Basic word order was most likely SVO.
Sound changes to Proto-Talsmic
- *wj
- > *j / #_
- > *w / otherwise
- /ř/ > */r/ _V, */l/ otherwise
- /*ɢ/ > /*ʁ/
- C[+ejective]
- > C[+aspirated] (the pathway may have been /*kʼ/ > /*kˀ/ > /*kʡ/ > /*kᴴ/ > /*kʰ/)
- > C[-aspirated] / _C
- > /*ʔ/ / _#
- C[-ejective]
- > C[-aspirated]
- > C[+aspirated] / _C
- /*z/ > /*r/ / V_V, V_#
- /*c *ʒ *cʰ/ > /*s *z *s/, /*cc *ʒʒ *ccʰ/ > /*ts *dz *ts/
- /*nr/ > /*mr/
Sound changes from Proto-Talsmic
PTal | HThm | LThm | Tiz | Sn | Qel |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
*m | m | /m/ | /m/ | /m/ | /m/ |
*p | p | /p/, /b/ | /p/ | ||
*b | b | /b/ | /b/ | ||
*pʰ | f | /h/ | /p/ | ||
*n | n | /n/ | /n/ | ||
*t | t | /t/, /d/ | /t/ | ||
*d | d | /j/ | /d/ | ||
*tʰ | th | /f/ | /ħ/ | /t/ | |
*s | s | /s~ʃ/ | /s/ | ||
*z | z, r | /z~ʒ/, /ɾ/ | /z/ | ||
*ç | th, f | /f/ | /ʃ/, /tʃʰ/ | /ʃ/ | /h/ |
*ƶ | ð, f | /v/ | /ʒ/, /dʒʱ/ | /ʒ/ | /j/ |
*c | ŧ | /ts~tʃ/ | /tʃ/, /tʃʰ/ | /tʃ/ | /ts/ |
*ɟ | ł | /j/ | /j/, /ɧ/ | /dʒ/ | /dz/ |
*k | c, ch | /k/, /g/, /tʃ/, /ʒ/ | /k/, /kʰ/ | /k/ | |
*g | g, ch | /g/, /ʒ/, /w/ | /g/, /gʱ/ | /g/ | |
*kʰ | ch, c | /x/, /ʃ/ | /x/, /kxʰ/ | /k/ | |
*q | q, ħ | /ɴ/, /h/ | /ʡ/, /ʡʰ/ | /ŋ~ɴ/ | /q/ |
*ʁ | ħ, v | /h/, /w/ | /w/, /ʍ/ | /ʁ/ | /ʁ/ |
*qʰ | ħ | /h/ | /ʕ/, /ħ/ | /ʕ/, /ħ/ | /χ/ |
*l | l | /l/ | /l/ | ||
*r | r | /ɾ/ | /r/ | ||
*w | v | /v/ | /b/, /w/ | ||
*j | ı | /j/ | /j/ | ||
*h | h | /h/ | /h/ | ||
*ʔ | Ø | Ø | Ø |
to Tizian
- /w/ > /v/
- /ʁ/
- > /w/ _C[-velar],
- > /ʕ/ otherwise
- /n/ > /ː/ _C[-glide]
- /l/ > /r/ _C[-glide]
- /z/ > /r/ / _C[+voiced, not /z/]
- /sŧ, šŧ/ > /št/
- Stress accent develops from initial stress.
- /aː/ > /o/
- /eː oː/ > /e˞ o˞/ <ee oo>
- /iː uː ʉː/ > /iɚ uɚ ʉɚ/ medially.
- /ai ei/ > /ei i/
- /ç ʝ/
- > /ʃ ʒ/
- /p t ŧ k b d g/ > /pʰ tʰ ŧʰ kʰ bʰ dʰ gʰ/
- _V[+high tone]
- _C[+fricative]#