Talsmic languages: Difference between revisions
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**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. | **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. | ||
*The shift of ''*s'' into ''*h'' and subsequent 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. | *The shift of ''*s'' into ''*h'' and subsequent 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. | ||
*Some metathesis occurred too. | |||
==Proto-Talsmic phonology== | ==Proto-Talsmic phonology== |
Revision as of 22:43, 19 December 2014
Themsárimai: Gávthens tálsmimens
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).
Phylogeny
Raxo-Talsmic |
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Characteristics
The historical Talsmic languages have all shared the following characteristics to some extent:
- conversion of a former case system into a system of state distinctions (e.g. definiteness, possessedness, predicative/attributive, generic/specific)
- rigidly head-initial word order
- verb-initial clauses; modern Talsmic languages are topic-prominent and thus have V2 independent clauses and verb-initial dependent clauses.
- heavy grammatical use of pronominal suffixes/enclitics on possessed nouns, verbs and prepositions, that index their dependents
- some descendants eventually creep toward being polysynthetic, supplanting former finite verbs with possessed infinitives/participles of complex compound verbs, and predicative nouns
- 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
- More recent Talsmic languages have honorific systems developed from abstract nouns in the feminine gender. Therefore former feminine pronouns and verbs develop into honorific markers.
Characteristic phylogenetic innovations vis-à-vis Zachydic include:
- prominence of tense rather than aspect in verbal TAM, unlike in mainland Zachydic languages.
- Rhotacization of /*z/ to /*r/ / V_V and V_#, and secondary rhotacization (often before consonants, the choice of which depends on the language).
- Development of Proto-Zachydic ejective stops into spirants.
- Conflation of non-labialized and labialized dorsal stops, and preservation of the velar-uvular distinction.
- 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.
- The shift of *s into *h and subsequent 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.
- Some metathesis occurred too.
Proto-Talsmic phonology
Consonant inventory
Pyr Chlʰíse model
The following is the Proto-Talsmic consonant system as conjectured by Núrian Talsmicist Dazʰír pyr Chlʰíse: he surmised that Proto-Raxo-Talsmic ejective series had turned into an aspirated series in PTal, which has spirantized in daughter languages. This reconstruction is now considered obsolete.
Proto-Talsmic reconstructed consonants (pyr Chlʰíse) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labial | Alveolar | Lateral | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |||
Nasal | *m | *n | |||||||
Plosive | voiceless | *p | *t | *ƛ | *k | *q | *ʔ | ||
voiced | *b | *d | *λ | *g | |||||
aspirated | *pʰ | *tʰ | *ƛʰ | *kʰ | *qʰ | ||||
Fricative | voiceless | *s | *ł | *h | |||||
voiced | *z | *ḽ | *ʁ | ||||||
Approximant | *w | *l | *j | ||||||
Trill | *r |
Guànitzhùtł model
Xamùz Guànitzhùtł revised the pyr Chlʰíse model, positing that the shift from ejectives to spirants had occurred earlier (probably ejective plosives ~ ejective affricates > affricates > fricatives); she noted the inconsistency of evidence for aspirated stops at any stage of Talsmic languages.
Proto-Talsmic reconstructed consonants (Guànitzhùtł) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labial | Alveolar | Lateral | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |||
Nasal | *m | *n | |||||||
Plosive | voiceless | *p | *t | *ƛ | *k | *q | *ʔ | ||
voiced | *b | *d | *λ | *g | |||||
Fricative | voiceless | *ɸ | *s, *θ | *ł | *x | *χ | *h | ||
voiced | *z | *ḽ | *ʁ | ||||||
Approximant | *w | *l | *j | ||||||
Trill | *r |
Vocalic inventory
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | *i *ī | *u *ū | |
Mid | *e *ē | *o *ō | |
Open | *a *ā |
The only diphthongs were those that could be considered vowel-[j/w] sequences.
Proto-Talsmic morphology
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 | *çúmū | *méisar | *méisoir | *méisāne | ||||||
Accusative | *çúmeç | *çúmōç | *çúmūt | *méisaç | *méisoiç | *méisina | ||||||
Genitive/Prepositional | *çúmu | *çúmār | *çúmakʰe | *méiset | *méisair | *méis(in)ir | ||||||
Ablative | *çúmenʔ | *méisanʔ | ||||||||||
Allative | ? | ? | ||||||||||
Instrumental | *çúmīl | *méisai |
The essive case (*-ēri) 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
Tense
The Proto-Talsmic verbal system has converted the pre-existing aspect-based perfective/imperfective dichotomy into a time-based one (past/non-past). The irregularity of the past system is probably a result of conflation of many different parent aspect systems.
Aspect
The following aspect suffixes can be reconstructed:
- prospective *-eh-
- inceptive *-lʁa-
- cessative *-mbe-
Mood
Proto-Talsmic has kept many moods intact (imperative, desiderative, hortative, optative). The negative imperative used the prohibitive particle along with the hortative form, as in Proto-Zachydic. The moods are frequently collapsed by its progeny (e.g. jussive in Themsaran).
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 the a-paradigm 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
Todo: rederive past tense... they don't look like they could (all) be perfective suffixes.
Subject affixes | |||
---|---|---|---|
Present/Non-past | |||
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
1.ex | -īn | -dir | -mī |
1.in | - | -ʁ-sē | -n-sē |
2 | -r | -r-sē | -l-sē |
3.m | -m | -iri- | -ʁih |
3.f | -isi | -tih | |
Simple past | |||
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
1.ex | -nʔe | -sid | -mā |
1.in | - | -ʁʔā, -tar | -nʔā, -taq |
2 | -rʔe | -rʔā | -lʔā |
3.m | -ā(-m) | -ā-iri | -ā-ʁih |
3.f | -ā-isi | -ā-tih | |
Prospective | |||
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
1.ex | -eh-īn | -eh-dir | -eh-mī |
1.in | - | -eh-ʁsē | -eh-nsē |
2 | -eh-r | -eh-rsē | -eh-lsē |
3.m | -eh-m | -eh-iri- | -eh-ʁēj |
3.f | -eh-isi | -eh-tēj | |
Imperative | |||
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
1.in | - | -ʁsi | -nsi |
2 | -h | -rsi | -lsi |
Hortative | |||
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
1.ex | -īn-ti | -dis-ti | -mī-ti |
1.in | - | -ʁs-ti | -ns-ti |
2 | -ti | -rs-ti | -ls-ti |
3.m | -m-ti | -iri-ti | -ʁih-ti |
3.f | -isi-ti | -tih-ti | |
Desiderative | |||
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
1.ex | -īn-ʔi | -dir-ʔi | -mī-ʔi |
1.in | - | -ʁsē-ʔi | -nsē-ʔi |
2 | -r-ʔi | -rsē-ʔi | -lsē-ʔi |
3.m | -m-ʔi | -iri-ʔ | -ʁih-ʔi |
3.f | -isi-ʔi | -tih-ʔi | |
Optative | |||
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
1.ex | -īn-aʔ | -dir-aʔ | -mī-aʔ |
1.in | - | -ʁs-aʔ | -ns-aʔ |
2 | -r-aʔ | -rs-aʔ | -ls-aʔ |
3.m | -m-aʔ | -ir-aʔ | -ʁ-aʔ |
3.f | -is-aʔ | -t-aʔ |
Other verbal affixes
Other reconstructible affixes include:
- *-pe- potential (e.g. Thm. tacvéi 'know (a fact)' < tak-pe-īn 'be able to say')
- *-re- passive
- *-ina- causative, i.e. supply sb with sth to [verb]/a patient of [verb]
- *-ska- causative
- *az-, "towards" directional prefix.
- the memory evidential prefix *ʔṇʔ-.
Proto-Talsmic syntax
Basic word order was most likely SVO, as evinced by the order verb-object suffix in all daughter languages.
Sound changes to Proto-Talsmic
- *wj
- > *j / #_
- > *w / 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/
Sound changes from Proto-Talsmic
Vocabulary
ʔ
- *ʔáʔmar=ʔ: ‘fist’ > Thm. ámmáin ‘grip, handle’
- *ʔan-: 'father' > Thm. anétt
- *ʔā́ƛʰe-: 'heaven' > Thm. ā́them ‘holy’
- *ʔāmar: 'mother'
- *ʔāzda: ‘great, big’ > Thm. ā́rd
- *ʔiʔ: 'and' > Thm. ie
- *ʔihira: > Thm. ī́r 'island'
- *ʔikta: > Thm. ícht ‘jar, jug’
- *ʔina: ‘I’ (1sg pronoun) > Thm. ná
- *ʔinh-: ‘lie, to settle down’ > Thm. inthī́ ‘let me lie’, insé ‘city, town’
- *ʔūra: 'many, much' > Thm. ū̀r
b
- *búka: 'way' > Thm. búcosáin 'doubt (< have two ways)'
d
- *da: 'הִנֵּה, here it is' (deictic/presentative particle) > Thm. -d in some def. suffixes, daer 'is not' (predicate negation), dáte 'here/near us (inclusive)', Núr. dá 'this (near 1+2)'
g
h
- *hám: 'do not (prohibitive)' > Thm. hám'
- *hir: 'not (indicative)' > Thm. hir- negative prefix, tír (< *ʔet-hir 'not ever') 'not (indicative)', daer (< *da-hir) 'am/is/are not (predicate)'
j
- *jénaqa: 'water' > Thm. jénā́
k
- *kéhma: 'one' > Thm. cḗm
kʰ
l
- *lahma: 'good' > Thm. lā́m
ł
ḽ
ƛ
ƛʰ
λ
m
n
- *neła 'sweet, pleasant' > Thm. néth
p
pʰ
- *pʰinʔar 'daughter' > Thm. fínne, Qel. fīt, Núr. fí, Sna. fien
q
qʰ
r
ʁ
s
t
w
- *wélja: name > Thm. véli