Valthungian: Difference between revisions

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The wja-stems combine all of the worst aspects of the w- and j-stems, but fortunately they’re a pretty small group. Read more about them here: [[Valthungian/wja-Stem Nouns|Valthungian wja-Stem Nouns]].
The wja-stems combine all of the worst aspects of the w- and j-stems, but fortunately they’re a pretty small group. Read more about them here: [[Valthungian/wja-Stem Nouns|Valthungian wja-Stem Nouns]].


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===ō-Stems (Feminine)===
===ō-Stems (Feminine)===
The ō-stems are really just the feminine version of the a-stems, historically speaking.


====Pure ō-Stems====
====ō-Stems====
The pure ō-stems have even less drama than the masculine and neuter a-stems. No metathesis, no umlaut, no palatalisation: pretty straightforward, really.
{{Template: Valthungian/n.st.f.ō|snuž|daughter-in-law}}


====jō-Stems====
====jō-Stems====
The jō-stems have umlaut, but it is persistent throughout the paradigm, so there are no extra steps to learn. There are the usual palatal variations as well, but they are also consistent.
{{Template: Valthungian/n.st.f.jō|hen|hen}}


====ijō-Stems====
====ijō-Stems====
The ijō-stems are a bit weird, mainly because the nominative singular seems to have collapsed in Proto-Germanic into a single -i (more of [[w:Siever's Law|Siever’s]] shenanigans), leaving a modern reflex of a simple -e following an unumlauted, unpalatalised stem. Otherwise, the ijō-stems are indistinguishable from the jō-stems in modern Valthungian.
{{Template: Valthungian/n.st.f.ijō|hundr|hyndr|century}}


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====wō-Stems====
====wō-Stems====