Scots Norse: Difference between revisions
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Since the early 1990's, Scots Norse has gained a small but dedicated community of linguists that are determined to further document it and make resources more readily available. As of 2018, an online course has been published that goes over Standard Scots Norse, and it has been continually updated since then, improving the quality and extent of the contents, having started out as a rather barebones description of the phonology, orthography, and rudimentary grammar. | Since the early 1990's, Scots Norse has gained a small but dedicated community of linguists that are determined to further document it and make resources more readily available. As of 2018, an online course has been published that goes over Standard Scots Norse, and it has been continually updated since then, improving the quality and extent of the contents, having started out as a rather barebones description of the phonology, orthography, and rudimentary grammar. | ||
==Development== | |||
The development of Scots Norse is one of the best understood aspects of the language, owing to its extreme divergence being an interest to linguists. | |||
===Pre-Scots Norse=== | |||
This is the form of Scots Norse when it was still a dialect of Old Norse | |||
*lengthening of stressed vowels in open syllables | |||
*loss of gemination | |||
*final /r̩/ and nominal singular /ɑr, ir/ > /ə/ | |||
*final front vowels > /ʲə/, final back vowels to /ə/ | |||
*hl, hv, hr > l, v, r | |||
*/ɣ/ > /g/ | |||
*/w/ > /v/, causing /f/ [v] to merge back with [f], thus "arfa" [ɑr.vɑ] > [ɑr.fə] (modern /əɾf/) | |||
*/θ, ð/ > /t, d/, with a few cases of /θ, ð/ > /f, v/ | |||
*diphthong flattening, /øy, ɒu/ > /øː, oː/ | |||
*merger of mid-high and mid-low vowels | |||
*e > ja occasionally when Proto-Germanic *e (typically becomes ja in Old Norse anyways) | |||
*/Cj/ > /Cʲ/ | |||
===Sudrey Norse=== | |||
Sudrey Norse, also occasionally called "Middle Scots Norse", is the stage directly before Modern, it is in no way intelligible with the modern language. | |||
*development of slender/broad/plain distinction | |||
*front round vowels become slender back vowels | |||
*short vowels > /ɪ, ɛ, ə, ʊ, ɔ/ | |||
*long vowels > /i, e, ɑ, u, o/ | |||
*loss of /ə/ between two sonorants (such as /jər/ > /ir/), unless part of an inflectional ending. | |||
*unstressed vowels to /ə/. | |||
*/r/ becomes /ɾ/ intervocalically<sup>?</sup> | |||
===Modern Scots Norse=== | |||
*mutations develop through the loss of word final sounds | |||
**lenition: from being intervocalic | |||
**eclipsis: from nasal clusters | |||
*several palatalized sounds shift: | |||
**/s, z, n, l, k, g, h, ɣ/ > /ʃ, ʒ, ɲ, ʎ, c, ɟ, ç, ʝ/ | |||
==Phonology== | ==Phonology== | ||
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Most parts of speech are split among three "types" or "classes" based on the mutation they cause in the following word, these are called "radical", "lenite", and "eclipse", and they generally don't affect the word itself. Verbs form the primary exception, as they very consistently follow a single pattern, with the dictionary form (the infinitive) always being a lenite. | Most parts of speech are split among three "types" or "classes" based on the mutation they cause in the following word, these are called "radical", "lenite", and "eclipse", and they generally don't affect the word itself. Verbs form the primary exception, as they very consistently follow a single pattern, with the dictionary form (the infinitive) always being a lenite. | ||
A set of colors will be applied within the tables here, each color highlighting a specific thing. | |||
*red: the ending. | |||
*blue: the mutation. | |||
*green: the impersonal infix. (for verbs) | |||
*purple: the mutation within the ending. (for prepositions) | |||
===Nominals=== | ===Nominals=== | ||
====Nouns==== | ====Nouns==== | ||