Modern Gallaecian mutation: Difference between revisions

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==Nasal mutation (''esloñaloscaso'')==
==Nasal mutation (''esloñaloscaso'')==
''Nasal'' or ''hard mutation'' is far less common than its soft counterpart. Celtic nasal endings <i title="Proto-Celtic-language text" lang="cel-pro">-om</i>, <i title="Proto-Celtic-language text" lang="cel-pro">-ām</i> evolved into nasalized vowels, which lost the nasalization in most environments. In those where it was kept, it mutated the following consonant, hence the name.
''Nasal'' or ''hard mutation'' is far less common than its soft counterpart. Celtic nasal endings <i title="Proto-Celtic-language text" lang="cel-pro">*-om</i>, <i title="Proto-Celtic-language text" lang="cel-pro">*-ām</i> evolved into nasalized vowels, which lost the nasalization in most environments. In those where it was kept, it mutated the following consonant, hence the name.
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==Sources==
==Sources==
* <span class="plainlinks">[https://www.reddit.com/u/chrsevs Evans, Christian C.]</span> (2018). [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1qyGWPClaEd2jyW-VmYh5IRKpJz9oq99X <i title="Modern Gallaecian-language text" lang="cel-gal">Calá Nuivaisá: Covezaso que reherensia</i>] [''Modern Gallaecian: An Introduction and Reference''] <span style="font-size: 95%;">(PDF)</span>. [[w:ISBN (identifier)|ISBN]]&nbsp;[[w:Special:BookSources/978-0-359-07664-2|978-0-359-07664-2]].
* <span class="plainlinks">[https://www.reddit.com/u/chrsevs Evans, Christian C.]</span> (2018). [https://drive.proton.me/urls/SBR7D983A0#NC96KilyZQuD <i title="Modern Gallaecian-language text" lang="cel-gal">Calá Nuivaisá: Covezaso que reherensia</i>] [''Modern Gallaecian: An Introduction and Reference''] <span style="font-size: 95%;">(PDF)</span>. [[w:ISBN (identifier)|ISBN]]&nbsp;[[w:Special:BookSources/978-0-359-07664-2|978-0-359-07664-2]].
* Evans, Christian C. (April 2021). <span class="plainlinks">[https://www.reddit.com/u/lysimachiakis Lysimachiakis]; [https://www.reddit.com/u/miacomet Miacomet]; [https://www.reddit.com/u/slorany Slorany]</span> (eds.). [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1AIZ_FwLek3nKrYsbE9sZxTZmi_pwf7DR "Mutation in Modern Gallaecian"] <span style="font-size: 95%;">(PDF)</span>. ''Segments''. r/conlangs (1, ''Phonology''): 39–42.
* Evans, Christian C. (April 2021). <span class="plainlinks">[https://www.reddit.com/u/lysimachiakis Lysimachiakis]; [https://www.reddit.com/u/miacomet Miacomet]; [https://www.reddit.com/u/slorany Slorany]</span> (eds.). [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1AIZ_FwLek3nKrYsbE9sZxTZmi_pwf7DR "Mutation in Modern Gallaecian"] <span style="font-size: 95%;">(PDF)</span>. ''Segments''. r/conlangs (1, ''Phonology''): 39–42.


[[Category:Modern Gallaecian language]]
[[Category:Modern Gallaecian language]]

Latest revision as of 17:27, 26 March 2025

Modern Gallaecian features, as other Celtic languages, a word-initial consonantal mutation system. While there is some evidence that other Continental Celtic languages such as Gaulish might have evolved mutation,[1] it is impossible to ascertain whether Gallaecian would too.

Soft mutation (bucoscaso)

The so-called soft mutation affects plosive consonants. It is the result of plosives voicing between vowels or voiced consonants.

Environments

  • Feminine nouns of either number in the direct case after the definite article: beaem vea, terbaem derbas.
  • Singular masculine nouns in the locative case after the definite article: torhedoen dorheide.
  • After singular possessive pronouns, that is, mo ‘my’, to ‘your’, and so ‘his/her/its’: quenomo gueno, páto bá, gañaso haña.
  • After certain prepositions:
  • In singular existential constructions: téTa dé uba ‘There is tea here’
  • After the numbers 2, 5, and 8: tomatedau domate, quessoquenque guesso, polbootu bolbo.
  • After the negative particle ne: cobruñeNe gobru ‘I don't want’

Nasal mutation (esloñaloscaso)

Nasal or hard mutation is far less common than its soft counterpart. Celtic nasal endings *-om, *-ām evolved into nasalized vowels, which lost the nasalization in most environments. In those where it was kept, it mutated the following consonant, hence the name.

Original > Mutated
b > m
d n
g c/qu
m v

Environments

  • After a genitive plural pronoun, i.e. asero ‘our’, suero ‘your’, and so ‘their’: dunoasero nuno.
  • After the number seven: garoseta caro.
  • After the preposition i: míi ví camerze.

Marginal mutations

Hard g

Outside soft and nasal mutations, the letter g shifts to c (before a, o, or u) and qu (after e and i) after a word ending in n, namely the definite article en.

M-to-b mutation

While regarded as a kind of soft mutation, it is the only mutation in Modern Gallaecian that is not triggered by the preceding sounds. Instead, if a syllable starts with m and its coda or the onset of the following one is an n, the former mutates into a b.

mini-saia bini ‘miniskirt’ [3]

Notes

  1. ^ Gray, Louis H. (October 1944). "Mutation in Gaulish". Language. Linguistic Society of America. 20 (4): 223. doi:10.2307/410121. JSTOR 410121.
  2. ^ Superseded by the hard g mutation.
  3. ^ Only example available; does this count as a hapax legomenon?

Sources