Proto-Riphic: Difference between revisions
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (native name ''firmištaniþjan irštinan'') is a descendant of Late PIE with a Proto-Germanic and Proto-Balto-Slavic hybrid aesthetic. | '''{{PAGENAME}}''' (native name ''firmištaniþjan irštinan'') is a descendant of Late PIE with a Proto-Germanic and Proto-Balto-Slavic hybrid aesthetic. | ||
'' | ''Kiwantan kalā in watrei flaweþi'' - The living fish swims in water | ||
==Phonology== | ==Phonology== |
Revision as of 22:19, 10 September 2021
Proto-Riphic (native name firmištaniþjan irštinan) is a descendant of Late PIE with a Proto-Germanic and Proto-Balto-Slavic hybrid aesthetic.
Kiwantan kalā in watrei flaweþi - The living fish swims in water
Phonology
Proto-Riphic is a satem language, which means that the original PIE palatovelars are fronted to alveolar and labiovelars get delabialized. It also underwent a sound shift similar to Grimm's law:
- PIE voiceless stops -> voiceless fricatives
- PIE "plain voiced"/glottalic stops -> voiceless stops
- PIE "voiced aspirates" -> voiced stops
Voiced stops have fricative allophones as in Spanish and Proto-Germanic.
Unlike in Proto-Germanic, though, there is no Verner's law in Proto-Nithish. However, there is Grassmann's law which applies to original PIE voiceless stops; if a root has two voiceless stops, only the second gets Grimmified: *peth2-yeti -> peþjeþi "it flies"
Proto-Riphic doesn't have a broad/slender contrast in consonants unlike its descendant Nithish.
In addition, Proto-Nithish has lots of loanwords from Uralic languages and Proto-Indo-Iranian, which did not undergo Grimm's law except when Iranian languages have it (i.e. *pr -> fr etc.)
Vowels
Most notably, h2 doesn't color vowels in Nithish languages; this comes from an original sound change *h2 -> /ç/ which later disappears with compensatory lengthening.
eh1 eh2 eh3 oh1 oh2 oh3 -> ē ē ō ā ā ō
The same is true of initial h2; for instance, elceþi from *h2el-k-eti "he walks".
Morphology
Proto-Riphic retained all 8 cases of PIE, as well as singular, dual, and plural forms of nouns. Its verbal morphology, though, is much simpler. It's notable for having an evidentiality distinction in verbs from the original PIE sigmatic aorist.