Lámeyi languages: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 14:55, 23 April 2022
Lámeyi | |
---|---|
Created by | – |
Geographic distribution | Lá |
Linguistic classification | One of the primary language families |
Proto-language | Proto-Lámeyi |
Subdivisions |
|
The Lámeyi languages are the members of the Aiwanic language macrofamily, which are spoken throughout the planet Lá. Around 160 thousand people speak Lámeyi languages, around two thirds of whom speak the Khad languages, and less than a third of whom speak the Thad languages. The name derives from the word for land in most of the Khad languages – lá. These languages also have extensive literary traditions, dating from the 7th century AC (after colonisation). Most of the other languages are spoken by much smaller communities, and many of them have not been described in detail.
Several low-level subgroups have been securely reconstructed based on the earliest written records these languages, but reconstruction of a proto-language for the family as a whole is still at an early stage, the grammatical structure of Sino-Tibetan remains unclear. Although the family is traditionally presented as divided into Thad (Eastern) and Khad (Western) branches, the common origin of the latter has never been clearly demonstarated, with some scholars dividing the Khad branch into Western and Southern groups/
Introduction
The language family of the planet Lá is a part of a much larger macrofamily, though most of it is still not properly constructed. The first Lámeyi language ever created was Thadmé, the idea of which came into being in 2015. Since then, the family went through several changes. By 2022 only a few languages have been developed.
The Lámeyi language family belongs to the Core Aiwanic languages, meaning it is more closely related to Mtari, or the Ketan languages, than to the Kyrdan or Settameric families, and similarly to Mtari, its ancestor was a late dialect of the Kliru language, that once had been spoken throughout the Galactic Empire almost three billion year ago.
Proto-language
Concerning the general style of the primitive language, the vast majority of words had two or three syllables and ended in a thematic vowel, which defined its meaning and a grammatical function. In three-syllable words, the theme vowel was in the second syllable, while the last syllable had a vowel of an unknown quality, since none of the daughter languages preserved it. Vowels in hiatus probably did not occur in the proto-language; where they occur in daughter languages, an intervening consonant has been lost. Other features reconstructed for Proto-Lámeyi are the following:
- Most consonants had a “strong” and “weak” versions. Using the strong or weak version of various consonants in the root word defined the function of the word.
- The primary word order was likely SOV (subject – object – verb), although Khad languages typically have VSO or VOS word order instead.
- Such categories as verbs, nouns or adjectives were not clearly defined. Each word could show a nominal or verbal morphology, depending on the context.
- The alignment was likely ergative-absolutive, retained by almost all later languages. A marked nominative or active-stative alignments have been proposed.
- The pronominal system is generally complex. Pronouns was likely an open class of words.
- Affixes, such as the imperfective p-, the intransitive m-, intensive tʲʰ- the optative t- and k-, as well as, infixes -lʷ-, -tʰ-, and -nʷ- and a suffix -s, that pften resulted in the development of tone in most languages of the family.
Stages
Scholars distinguish two stages of Proto-Lámeyi, named Early and Late. The Early Proto-Lámeyi stage, was the ancestor of all languages ever spoken in the world. However, this stage is very poorly understood. Only a few of word forms are explicitly reconstructed for this stage (one of them being *ajawV – “sky”, common for most Core Aiwanic laguages). Most of the reconstructed root words belong to the Late Proto-Lámeyi (or Common Lámeyi) stage.
Phonology
A typical Proto-Lámeyi word has a structure of (C)CVRC(C)VT(CV), where “C“ is a consonant or a consonant cluster, and ”VR” is a root vowel and “VT” is a thematic vowel. Many thematic vowels later fused with the roots they had modified. Havˁen and Las are the only languages that still retain this contrast in some words, however they have both expanded their inventory of thematic vowels.
Proto-Lámeyi exhibits a large number of consonants. Most languages did not retain a contrast between plain, palatalised and labialised sounds. Most consonants formed “strong” and “weak” pairs.
Labial | Alveolar | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | pal. | plain | lab. | pal. | plain | pal. | lab. | plain | lab. | |||
Nasal | strong | mb | mbʲ | nd | ndʷ | ŋg | ŋgʲ | ŋgʷ | ɴɢ | ɴɢʷ | ||
weak | m | mʲ | n | nʷ | ŋ | ŋʲ | ŋʷ | (ɴ) | (ɴʷ) | |||
Plosive | strong | pʰ | tʰ | tʷʰ | tʲʰ | kʰ | kʲʰ | kʷʰ | qʰ | |||
weak | p | pʲ | t | tʷ | tʲ | k | kʲ | kʷ | q | qʷ | (ʔ) | |
Fricative | s | sʷ | sʲ | x | xʲ | xʷ | ||||||
Liquid | strong | ɾ̞̊ | ɾ̞̊ʷ | ʁ | ʁʷ | (h) | ||||||
weak | ɺ | ɺʷ | ɺʲ | ʟ | j | w | ɦ |
Proto-Lámeyi vowels can be split into primary and secondary sets. Later Lámeyi languages had anywhere from five vowels (Classical Khad) to dozens of monophthongs and diphthongs. Languages which have greatly simplified consonant clusters tend to have more vowels. The open unrounded vowel *a is by far the most common and stable vowel in Lámeyi languages. The primary set was most likely stressed, they are also called the root vowels, because they were a stable part of word roots, unlike secondary or thematic vowels. Some scholars also define the third set for words with three syllables, which was later lost by all descendants of Proto-Lámeyi. Later reconstructions of Proto-Lámeyi tend to view its long vowels as diphthongs:
Height | Front | Central | Back |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | u | |
Mid | əɪ | ə | əʊ |
Open | aɪ | a | aʊ |
Height | Front | Back |
---|---|---|
Close | i | ɯ |
Mid | ə | ɤ |
Open | ɐ |
Several consonant clusters can be reconstructed for Proto-Lámeyi, mostly based on the Las language initial clusters:
Initial and Final | Medial | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
fp | st | ʂɺ | xk | m̥sk | sn̥ | mz | ɺz | nz | stk | stq | kʂ |
Sounds, such as [f] or [ʂ], were allophones of /s/ at that stage, occuring only in consonant clusters. These clusters typically received the coarticulation of the neighbouring consonants, for example – *msk+*kʷeutVs → *mskʷeutas [ˈm̥skʷəʊ.tɐs] (“cliff”), where the whole initial cluster becomes labialised.
Morphology
Most Proto-Lámeyi stems typically have the following structure:
-
(P) — Ci — (G) — VR — Cf — (s)
- P: prefixes - optional
- Ci: initial consonant
- G: glide - optional
- VR: root vowel (optionally lengthened)
- Cf: final consonant
- s: nominalising suffix - optional
The simplest root was thus CiVRCf. This resembles most Mtari stems, which is one of the features inherited from their common ancestor. The -s suffix most likely was an animacy marker, the same suffix was present in most Core Aiwanic languages, where it usually developed into ergative or locative cases. In Common Lámeyi it likely became a singulative marker instead, while the plural remained unmarked. Unlike many Core Aiwanic languages Proto-Lámeyi nouns likely did not decline for number, or the number was marked by final vowels, which were later lost. Nouns did not decline for case either, whatever case system its Klesuic ancestor had possessed, Proto-Lámeyi lost it during its early stage of development.
Nouns declined for possession, the possessed form of three-syllable nouns causes syncope (the word *milate – “cloud” – isused as an example:
√MILʲ-T | Free | Possessed | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 2nd | 3rd Agent | 3rd Patient | ||
Marked | *milates | *umiltes | *samiltes | *amiltes | *jamilte |
Unmarked | *milate | *umilte | *samilte | *amilte |
The marked form was likely used in a similar manner to a definite article, or a marked nominative case (if the proto-language had a marked nominative or active-stative alignment).
A system of verbal agreement is reconstructed for Proto-Lámeyi. Verbal agreement has disappeared in most Khad branches, as they innovated a different system, but was preserved in the Las language in particular. This is a topic of scholarly debate, however, and the existence of a complex verbal agreement system is disputed.