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| ==Characteristics==
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| The historical Talmic languages have all shared the following characteristics to some extent:
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| *conversion of a former case system into a system of state distinctions (e.g. definiteness, possessedness, predicative/attributive, generic/specific)
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| *rigidly head-initial word order
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| **verb-initial clauses; modern Talmic languages are topic-prominent and thus have V2 independent clauses and verb-initial dependent clauses.
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| *heavy grammatical use of pronominal suffixes/enclitics on possessed nouns, verbs and prepositions, that index their dependents
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| **some descendants eventually creep toward being polysynthetic, supplanting former finite verbs with possessed infinitives/participles of complex compound verbs, and predicative nouns
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| *[[w:Differential object marking|differential]] indexing of the direct object and the possessor, and occasionally the prepositional object
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| *grammatical apophony (tonal, vocalic or consonantal)
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| *word order changes for topicalization and focusing
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| *More recent Talmic languages have honorific systems developed from abstract nouns in the feminine gender. Therefore former feminine pronouns and verbs develop into honorific markers.
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| Characteristic phylogenetic innovations vis-à-vis Zachydic include:
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| *prominence of tense rather than aspect in verbal TAM, unlike in mainland Zachydic languages.
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| *Rhotacization of /*z/ to /*r/ / V_V and V_#, and secondary rhotacization (often before consonants, the choice of which depends on the language).
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| *Development of Proto-Zachydic ejective stops into spirants.
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| *Conflation of non-labialized and labialized dorsal stops, and preservation of the velar-uvular distinction.
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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.
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| *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 Talmic.
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| *Some metathesis occurred too.
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| ==Proto-Talmic phonology== | | ==Proto-Talmic phonology== |