Old Valthungian
Old Valthungian represents a period in the development of the Valthungian language lasting from around 800‒1200 a.d. marked mainly by changes to geminates and intervocalic consonants, as well as the introduction of Germanic ī/j-umlaut and some small but important changes to all of the vowels. Though this is a range which experienced many changes, the most representative example of “Old Valthungian” is the language as it is captured in a few surviving texts believed to date to around 950‒975 a.d.
Major Changes from Griutungi to Old Valthungian
Variation and Expansion of East Germanic Glide Insertion
Germanic Obstruent Devoicing
Geminate Simplification I
Spirantization of Fricatives
This is a change that had likely already started long before the division between Gothic and Griutungi, and probably happened similarly in Gothic as well. In the Griutungi lineage, it occurred in three distinct stages:
Stage I ( < 400 a.d.)
Intervocalic voiced fricatives (i.e. /b/, /d/, and /g/) became spirantized: /β/, /ð/, and /ɣ/. This likely happened quite early, perhaps already by Proto-Germanic times, and was clearly in operation in Gothic as well.
C | → | +cnt
|
/ | V ___ V | |||||
+vox
|
|||||||||
-cnt
|
“A voiced non-continuant (i.e. stop) consonant becomes continuant (i.e. fricative) when intervocalic.”
In more direct terms:
b | → | β | / | any vowel } ___ { any vowel | |
d | → | ð | |||
g | → | ɣ |
E.g. PGmc. *hlaibai ‘loaf.dat’, *mōdēr ‘mother’, *ōganą ‘to fear’
→ Gothic hlaiba /hlɛ̄βa/, *mōdar /mōðar/, ōgan /ōɣan/
~ Griutungi hlǣba /“”/, mōdar, ōgan
→ O.V. hlaeva /“”/, moðar, oyan
(eventually…)
→ M.V. þlǣva /θlēva/, mōðr /mouðr̩/, ōgn /ougn̩/
→ Vlth. þlǣva /θlē̞vɑ/, mōðra /mauðrɑ/, ōgna /augnɑ/
Stage II ( ~ 400 a.d.)
The same process occurred, but in Stage II the environment changes to include /l/ and /r/ before the stop and any sonorant (i.e. /l/, /r/, /m/, or /n/) after. This likely occurred before or during the time of Griutung proper, and may have happened in a similar environment in Gothic.
C | → | +cnt
|
/ | +son
|
___ | +son
|
|||||||||
+vox
|
-nas
|
||||||||||||||
-cnt
|
“A voiced non-continuant (i.e. stop) consonant becomes continuant (i.e. fricative) when preceded by a vowel or a liquid and followed by any sonorant (a vowel, a liquid, or a nasal).”
In more direct terms:
b | → | β | / | V, l, r } ___ { V, l, r, m, n | |
d | → | ð | |||
g | → | ɣ |
Stage III ( ~ 500 a.d.)
In the final stage, which happened significantly after the earlier two (probably not before 900 a.d.), the unvoiced continuants /f/ and /θ/, became voiced in the same environment as stage II.
C | → | +vox
|
/ | +son
|
___ | +son
|
|||||||||
-vox
|
-nas
|
||||||||||||||
+cnt
|
|||||||||||||||
( | -bck
|
) |
“An unvoiced non-back continuant (i.e. fricative other than /h/[1]) consonant becomes voiced when preceded by any non-nasal sonorant and followed by any' sonorant.”
In more direct terms:
f | → | β | / | V, l, r } ___ { V, l, r, m, n | |
þ | → | ð |
Stop Insertion after Nasals
fl-to-thl- goes here
Voicing and Devoicing of Consonant Clusters
Voicing of Word-Final /s/ after a Voiced Consonant
Word-final /s/ was voiced after /b/, /d/, and /g/. (And thus I dispense with the mystery of what the phonetic and phonemic value of the /g/ of Gothic dags might have been!)
s | → | z | / | C | ___ | # | |||
+vox
|
|||||||||
-cnt
|
“Word-final s becomes voiced when following a voiced stop.”
In more direct terms:
s | → | z | / | b, d, g } | ___ | # |
Devoicing of Word-Internal Obstruent Clusters
Word-internal obstruent clusters (specifically z followed by a voiced stop consonant) are devoiced.
z | C | → | -vox
|
/ | V ___ V | |||||
+vox
|
||||||||||
-cnt
|
“A cluster consisting of z followed by a voiced stop becomes unvoiced when intervocalic.”
In more direct terms:
zb | → | sp | / | any vowel } ___ { any vowel | |
zd | → | st | |||
zg | → | sk |
E.g. razda ‘language’ → rasta, azgō ‘ashes’ → askō …aska.
Changes to Geminate Consonants
Between 500‒650 a.d. all of the geminate consonants inherited from Griutungi were condensed to a single consonant. This also put an end to a persistent rule inherited from Proto-Germanic whereby geminate consonants collapsed before and obstruent or a word-boundary, there being no more geminate consonants to encounter such an environment.
Changes to Geminate Obstruents
In geminate obstruents – that is, geminate stops and fricatives – the first obstruent of the pair is lenited to /h/. (Later, in a separate process of h-deletion, these are eliminated completely.)
CC | → | hC | |||
-son
|
To put it more simply:
pp → hp
tt → ht
kk → hk
bb → hb
dd → hd
gg → hg
*
ff → hf
þþ → hþ
ss → hs
Changes to Geminate Sonorants
In geminate sonorants – that is, geminate nasals and liquids – the first sonorant of the pair becomes -son
, -vox
and -cnt
; that is, it is replaced by an unvoiced stop (in the same place of articulation).
Stage I
CC | → | C | C | |||||
+son
|
-son
|
|||||||
-vox
|
||||||||
-cnt
|
To put it more simply:
mm → pm
nn → tn
rr → tr
ll → tl
Stage II
Much later, perhaps as late as 750 or 800 a.d., pm shifts to tm, but only in words which had previously contained geminate mm
pm → tm
Vowel Changes
Lengthening of Word-Final Stressed Vowels
Vowel lengthening applies mainly to monosyllabic function words such as articles, pronouns, and prepositions.
V | → | +lng
|
/ | ___ # | |||||
+str
|
|||||||||
-lng
|
“Stressed short vowels become long when word-final.”
E.g. bi, þu, sa → bī, þū, sā
Lengthening of /ij/
All instances of ij become lengthened. (More accurately, ij becomes ī, and then the persistent glide-insertion rule immediately restores j before a following vowel, but it's simpler to just say that ij becomes īj.)
i | → | ī | / | ___ j |
“Short i is lengthened before j.”
Reversal of High Diphthong Altitude Trajectory
The high rising diphthong iu becomes a falling diphthong and is reanalyzed as a glide.
iu | → | ju |
Umlaut
Ī/J-Umlaut (hereafter referred to merely as “Umlaut,” as no other types of Umlaut occur in the diachrony of the Valthungian language) occurs fairly early in comparison to some of the other Germanic languages, though it has some particular quirks that other Germanic languages lacked.
V | → | -bck
|
/ | ___ | C…*{ī,j | |||||
+str
|
*Where … can only cross one syllable boundary. | |||||||||
+bck
|
“A stressed back vowel becomes fronted when ī or j occurs in the following syllable.”
This rule remains productive in the grammar at least through the change of iu to ju, because short i does not trigger umlaut. However, the vowel in ju from earlier iu is not subject to umlaut.
Change of Word-Initial /j/ to /g/
This is sometimes considered a part of Verschärfung, but I'm placing it here because it must necessarily occur contemporaneously with the iu → ju
change above. More specifically, there are a small number of words which begin with the sequence ⟨jiu-⟩, and this sequence as a whole becomes ⟨gju-⟩.
j | → | g | / | # ___ iu |
Rhotacism Launch
The phoneme /z/ begins the same process towards rhotacism seen in the other Germanic languages. This change occurs in all environments.
z | → | ʐ |
Expansion of East Germanic Verschärfung
There are actually several changes which occurred at different time periods which have been assembled here under the banner of “Verschärfung”. All of these changes deal with the way glide consonants change in intervocalic environments between the Gothic and Old Valthungian Periods.
Change of /w/ to /wg/
w | → | wg | / | V | ___ | V | |||
-str
|
Change of /j/ to /gj/
j | → | gj | / | V | ___ | V | |||
-str
|
Change of /h/ to /gw/
h | → | gw | / | V | ___ | V | |||
-str
|
Change of /hw/ to /gw/
(Much later...)
hw | → | gw | / | a(ː) | ___ | V | |||
-str
|
Breaking of Long Diphthongs
The “long diphthongs” which can be the result of Verschärfung undergo breaking and the two vowels are separated by a glide: /w/ if the first vowel is +bck
and /j/ if the first vowel is -bck
.
V̄V | → | V̄ | { j,w } | V |
Deletion of Final Unstressed /a/
Unstressed word-final a is deleted after m, n, and t; however, it is retained by analogy in inflections, such as the ending of the first person singular present indicative, or the dative singular of many masculine and neuter nouns. Ultimately, this mainly leads to the shortening of some prepositions and change of the neuter -ata ending to -at.
a | → | Ø | / | C | or t } | ___ # | |||
+nas
|
“Unstressed a is deleted word-finally after a nasal consonant or t.”
Phonology of Old Valthungian ca. 950 a.d.
- ^ It is likely that h was actually included in this change, as evidenced by certain changes in the Expansion of East Germanic Verschärfung, but that makes our formula more complicated and really doesn't change the outcome in any measurable way.