Proto-Alopian: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox language | {{Infobox proto-language | ||
| name | | name = Proto-Alopian | ||
| altname | | altname = Proto-Siwa | ||
| creator | | boxsize = 22.6em | ||
| | | creator = Étienne L. Poisson | ||
| | | target = Alopian | ||
| | | region = Western Canada | ||
| era = 2000 BCE | |||
| familycolor | | familycolor = alopian | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Infobox language family | |||
| name = Alopian | |||
| creator = Étienne L. Poisson | |||
| region = Western Canada | |||
| speakers = <!--population, for families treated as languages in censuses etc.--> | |||
| date = <!--date of population estimate--> | |||
| familycolor = Alopian | |||
| protoname = [[Proto-Alopian]] | |||
| child1 = Forest Alopian | |||
** Siwa | |||
** Sigori | |||
| child2 = Tundra Alopian | |||
** Eastern Onori | |||
** Western Onori | |||
| child3 = Coastal Alopian | |||
** Coastal Olma | |||
** Central Olma | |||
** Southern Olma | |||
| map = Alopian.png | |||
| mapcaption = {{#tag: center|Distribution of Alopian languages}} | |||
}} | |||
'''Proto-Alopian''' is the reconstructed ancestor of the Alopian language family. Little is known about its inventory or possible attestations other than the historical sound changes. It is believed that the Alopian people migrated from [[w:Europe|Europe]] around 3000 [[w:BCE|BCE]], in the [[w:Holocene|Holocene epoch]]. | |||
The two main theories of how this migration took place are either by foot over the frozen oceans of the [[w:Last Glacial Period|Last Glacial Period]] (known as “Early Settlement”) or by boat through the steadily-rising [[w:Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic Ocean]] (“Late Settlement”). | |||
After thousands of years of apparent nomadism, the Alopian people settled in present-day [[w:Quebec|Quebec]], where the common language began to split in different dialects that would end forming the Alopian languages. | |||
While most words are native (a priori), Proto-Alopian features roots from [[w:Uralic languages|Uralic]] and [[w:Algonquian languages|Algonquian languages]], as a product of their migration. | |||
==Etymology== | |||
The word “Alopian” that gives name to the language family comes from the {{mn|grc|ἀλωπός|ᾰ̓λωπός}} meaning “fox”, a strong cultural item for the Alopian people. | |||
==From Proto-Alopian to Siwa== | |||
Siwa is by far the most documented Alopian language, part of the Forest Alopian branch, and it is the language of around 30 000–60 000 speakers. The following list gathers most sound changes that Proto-Alopian underwent to become Siwa. | |||
[[Category:Languages]][[Category:A priori]] | [[Category:Languages]][[Category:A priori]] |
Revision as of 17:33, 14 April 2022
Proto-Alopian | |
---|---|
Proto-Siwa | |
Created by | Étienne L. Poisson |
Reconstruction of | Alopian |
Region | Western Canada |
Era | 2000 BCE |
Alopian | |
---|---|
Created by | Étienne L. Poisson |
Geographic distribution | Western Canada |
Linguistic classification | Alopian
|
Proto-language | Proto-Alopian |
Subdivisions |
|
Proto-Alopian is the reconstructed ancestor of the Alopian language family. Little is known about its inventory or possible attestations other than the historical sound changes. It is believed that the Alopian people migrated from Europe around 3000 BCE, in the Holocene epoch.
The two main theories of how this migration took place are either by foot over the frozen oceans of the Last Glacial Period (known as “Early Settlement”) or by boat through the steadily-rising Atlantic Ocean (“Late Settlement”).
After thousands of years of apparent nomadism, the Alopian people settled in present-day Quebec, where the common language began to split in different dialects that would end forming the Alopian languages.
While most words are native (a priori), Proto-Alopian features roots from Uralic and Algonquian languages, as a product of their migration.
Etymology
The word “Alopian” that gives name to the language family comes from the Lua error in Module:languages at line 576: attempt to index local 'first_sc' (a nil value). meaning “fox”, a strong cultural item for the Alopian people.
From Proto-Alopian to Siwa
Siwa is by far the most documented Alopian language, part of the Forest Alopian branch, and it is the language of around 30 000–60 000 speakers. The following list gathers most sound changes that Proto-Alopian underwent to become Siwa.