Aryan

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Aryan
*Airás
Indo-european migrations.jpeg
Models of indo-european migrations
Pronunciation[əi̯ˈrəs]
Created byVeno
SettingCaucasus Mountains
Erac.10,000–8,000 BC
Early form
Transitional Dialect
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Aryan (*Airás, pronounced /əi̯ˈrəs/) is an ab interiori language depicting the transition from Paleolithic Codes to Proto-Indo-European (PIE). There are no historical records of its existence, or comparative data to support it; rather, it is an abductive experiment based on the hypothesis of Transitional Dialects.

In the hybrid model, Aryan must have been spoken somewhere near the Caucasus Mountains in compliance with the Armenian Hypothesis, which in its current form holds that the speakers of "Pre-Proto-Indo-European" pertained to the genepool of the Caucasian Hunter-Gatherers (CHG)[1], who would eventually contribute to the formation of the Yamnaya Culture and the dispersion of "Core Proto-Indo-European" as detailed in the Kurgan Hypothesis. The age of the language is more controversial, being set between 12,000 and 10,000 years Before Present (BP), or the double of its daughter-language's, to coincide with the notion of Linguistic Modernity.

History

Development from Paleolithic Codes

The history of Aryan taken into account starts with the transition from Atomism to Double Articulation by the dialects of the Upper Paleolithic, mostly regarding the Pangaean Code as its ultimate source, next to the influence of the Diluvian and Hyperborean Codes. Although the actor responsible for this transition is a matter of debate even within the experiment, the loss of archaic features is assumed to coincide with the End of the Last Ice Age. At that time (12,000 BP), the loss of strict adherence to the primordial grammar might have allowed sound changes to take place, as seen below.

  • Weak (plosive) stops become aspirated/murmured preceding a laryngeal consonant, as strong (ejective/implosive) stops gain plosive qualities in the same position.
Weak Voiceless Stop
before laryngeal
Strong Voiceless Stop
before laryngeal
Weak Voiced Stop
before laryngeal
Strong Voiced Stop
before laryngeal
/kH/→/kh/ /kʼH/→/k/ /gH/→/gɦ/ /ɠH/→/g/
/pH/→/ph/ /pʼH/→/p/ /bH/→/bɦ/ /ɓH/→/b/
/tH/→/th/ /tʼH/→/t/ /dH/→/dɦ/ /ɗH/→/d/
Weak Voiceless Stop Weak Voiced Stop Strong Voiceless Stop Strong Voiced Stop
/k/→/k/ /g/→/g/ /kʼ/→/kh/ /ɠ/→/gɦ/
/p/→/p/ /b/→/b/ /pʼ/→/ph/ /ɓ/→/bɦ/
/t/→/t/ /d/→/d/ /tʼ/→/th/ /ɗ/→/dɦ/
  • Relative articulated sounds when stops transform into Diluvian consonant clusters following former examples of aspiration/breathy voice.
Retracted
before
Laryngeal
Retracted Advanced
before
Laryngeal
Advanced
/k̠H/→/khph/ /k̠/→/kp/ /k̟H/→/khth/ /k̟/→/kt/
/p̠H/→/phth/ /p̠/→/pt/ /p̟H/→/phkh/ /p̟/→/pk/
/t̠H/→/thkh/ /t̠/→/tk/ /t̟H/→/thph/ /t̟/→/tp/
/g̠H/→/gɦbɦ/ /g̠/→/gb/ /g̟H/→/gɦdɦ/ /g̟/→/gd/
/b̠H/→/bɦdɦ/ /b̠/→/bd/ /b̟H/→/bɦgɦ/ /b̟/→/bg/
/d̠H/→/dɦgɦ/ /d̠/→/dg/ /d̟H/→/dɦbɦ/ /d̟/→/db/
/k̠ʼH/→/kp/ /k̠ʼ/→/khph/ /k̟ʼH/→/kt/ /k̟ʼ/→/khth/
/p̠ʼH/→/pt/ /p̠ʼ/→/phth/ /p̟ʼH/→/pk/ /p̟ʼ/→/phkh/
/t̠ʼH/→/tk/ /t̠ʼ/→/thkh/ /t̟ʼH/→/tp/ /t̟ʼ/→/thph/
/ɠ̠H/→/gb/ /ɠ̠/→/gɦbɦ/ /ɠ̟H/→/gd/ /ɠ̟/→/gɦdɦ/
/ɓ̠H/→/bd/ /ɓ̠/→/bɦdɦ/ /ɓ̟H/→/bg/ /ɓ̟/→/bɦgɦ/
/ɗ̠H/→/dg/ /ɗ̠/→/dɦgɦ/ /ɗ̟H/→/db/ /ɗ̟/→/dɦbɦ/
  • Sonorants, contrary to the stop series, remain conserved when onset; however, they collapse as voiced codas.
Voiceless
Sonorant(I)
Voiced
Sonorant(I)
Voiceless
Sonorant(II)
Voiced
Sonorant(II)
/j̥/→/j̥/~/j/ /j/→/j/ /w̥/→/w̥/~/w/ /w/→/w/
/n̥/→/n̥/~/n/ /n/→/n/ /m̥/→/m̥/~/m/ /m/→/m/
/l̥/→/l̥/~/l/ /l/→/l/ /r̥/→/r̥/~/r/ /r/→/r/
  • The positive and negative forms of the sonorants still follow a Diluvian paradigm.
Retracted
Voiceless
Sonorant
Retracted
Voiced
Sonorant
Advanced
Voiceless
Sonorant
Advanced
Voiced
Sonorant
/j̠̊/→/j̥/~/j/ /j̠/→/j/ /j̟̊/→/j̥/~/j/ /j̟/→/j/
/n̠̊/→/kn/ /n̠/→/kn /n̟̊/→/pn/ /n̊/→/pn/
/l̠̊/→/l̥/~/l/ /l̠/→/l/ /l̟̊/→/l̥/~/l/ /l̟/→/l/
/ẘ̠/→/w̥/~/w/ /w̠/→/w/ /ẘ̟/→/w̥/~/w/ /w̟/→/w/
/m̠̊/→/dm/ /m̠/→/dm/ /m̟̊/→/gm/ /m̟/→/gm/
/r̠̊/→/r̥/~/r/ /r̠/→/r/ /r̟̊/→/r̥/~/r/ /r̟/→/r/
  • Within the turbulents, clicks are exchanged by plosive equivalents, and uvular laryngeals turn velar.
Labiodental Click Dental Click Alveolar Click
/ʘ̪/→/dʷ/ /ǀ/→/dʲ/ /ǁ/→/t͡ɬ/
Voiceless Uvular Laryngeal Voiced Uvular Laryngeal
/χ/→/x/ /ʁ/→/ɣ/
  • Complex and long vowels are reduced to their basic and short versions.
Front Central Back
/i/→/i/ /ɨ/→/i/ /u/→/u/
/y/→/u/ /ʉ/→/u/ /ɯ/→/i/
/e/→/e/ /ɪ/→/e/ /o/→/o/
/ø/→/o/ /ʊ/→/o/ /ɤ/→/e/
/e̞/→/i/ /ə/→/ə/ /o̞/→/u/
/ɛ/→/e/ /ɐ/→/a/ /ɔ/→/o/
/æ/→/e/ /a/→/a/ /ɒ/→/o/
Special cases
HVHC > HVC
CHVHC > CVC
CHVH > CVH
/ʕɨ̀ː/→/əi̯/
/V̰/→/Vː/~/aV/
/V̤/ > /Vː/~/Va/

In Morphology, Aryan introduced a series of innovations by mixing and developing peculiarities from different Paleolithic Codes. The Hyperborean nominative -s for example was probably borrowed via another caucasian substrate, which completely assumed the role of epenthetic root (next to Aryan *-ar) in the construction "ROOT1 ROOT2". Primordial [ˈn̠ʕih ˈə] "old" would therefore yield *knīás "old" (=*knih1 *ás) [PIE *sénos "old"]. Furthermore, this development culminated into the Indo-European Ablaut. That is: when the accent falls into the epenthetic root, the first root suffers a phonetic change influenced by the interaction between laryngeals and vowels, which fuse into diphthongs or long vowels. This effect is considered a reflex of Umlaut in the Pangaean Code, where guttural fricatives can alternate between their vocalic equivalents and even modify the qualities of the nucleus.

Stress in
first root
Stress in
second root
HV́C-R VVC-Ŕ
CV́C-R C∅C-Ŕ
CV́H-R CVV-Ŕ
Codex Aryan PIE equivalent
ˈhuhd-ə "water" *h1úd-ar "water" *wód-r̥ "water"
ˈhuhd ˈə "water-like" *wid-rás "aquatic" *ud-rós "aquatic"
ˈɗ̟ɦɨoh-ə "foot" *díoph-as "foot" *pód-s "foot"
ˈɗ̟ɦɨoh ˈə "foot-like" *pd-yás "pedestrian" *ped-yós "on foot"
ˈkhuħ-ə "sound" *kʰúh2-as "sound" *ḱléw-os "fame"
ˈkhuħ ˈə "sound-like" *kʰaw-ás "sound-maker" *ḱlu-ós "famous"

Development into Indo-European Languages

Correspondences:

  • gʰedʰ "to join" < *gʰdʰ- "to gather" < g̟
  • gʰabʰ ~ gʰeh₁bʰ- "to seize" < *pʰkʰ- "to take" < p̟


The language is demonstrared using two modern Indo-European languages (German and Russian) and two ancient ones (Latin and Greek).

Aryan has only zero-grade (∅) and full grade (_)

*(_)-as [forms active animate nouns] EX: kʰúh2as "sound" = PIE *(é)-os in *ḱlewos
*(∅)-ás [forms active animate adjectives] EX: *pdás "capable to step" = PIE *(e)-ós in *pṓds
*(á)-as [forms passive animate nouns] EX: ... = PIE *(ó)-os in ...
*(a)-ás [forms passive animate adjectives] EX: = PIE *(o)-ós, *the construction became agentive instead of passive in PIE, but some archaic forms remain, such as *gʰoysós "spear"
*(_)-ar [forms active inanimate nouns] EX: *húdar "water" = PIE *-r̥ in *wódr̥
*(∅)-ár [forms active inanimate adjectives] 
*(á)-ar [forms passive inanimate nouns]
*(a)-ár [forms passive inanimate adjectives]

mas

*(_)-tár [forms agent nouns]
*(_)-tram [forms instrument nouns] *fusion of *(_)-tár [agent particle] and *-am [neuter particle]
*(∅)-C-ás [forms derived nouns through mobile roots] EX: *pʰtʰūymás PIE = PIE *(∅)-mós

mobile roots: -*r "quality" -*m "result" -*dʰ "fixation"

NOTE: PIE neuter particle *-om derives from Aryan *(_)-am, which forms result nouns

origin of PIE declensions:

(_)-as Hysterokinetic:

  • kʰúh2as > (*ḱléwos) > *ḱléwos
  • kʰuh2ásyas > (*ḱlewésyos) > *ḱléwesos

(∅)-ás Hysterokinetic:

  • pdás > *pád∅s (*pods) > *pṓds
  • pdasyás > *padás∅s (*pedés) > *pedés
  • (á)-as Acrostatic:
  • pkáih1as > (*ǵʰéyos) > *ǵʰéyos
  • pkáih1asyas > (*ǵʰéyosyos) > *ǵʰéyosyo
  • (a)-ás Acrostatic:
  • pkaisás > (*ǵʰoysós) > *ǵʰoysós
  • pkaisásyas > (*ǵʰoysésyos) > *ǵʰoysósyo

ptár > ph2tḗr ptsaryás > ptryás (pətrés)> ph2trés


What marks a Transitional Dialect:

  • the presence of mobile roots


p̠hṵh "fume" > *pʰtʰawimás (*pʰtʰūh1-*más) "smoke" > *dʰuh2mós (*dʰewh2-*mós)

  • Hu, *u, *uH, *HuH > *we, *u, *ew, *we

Inheritances: huhg̠ > *h1ugp > *wegʷ ɦuhd > *h4ud > *sweyd

  • ud > *úd

p̟ʼhuh > *pkuh > *ǵʰew pʼhuh > *puh > *plew Borrowings:

  • h2ekʷ

-

  • Hū, *ū, *ūH, *HūH> h2ew, ew, ewh2, h2ew

Inheritances: p̠hṵh > *pʰtʰawi > *dʰewh2 krhṳh > *GRuia > *krewh2 Borrowings: -phu- [Diluvian] > *po > *peh3 -

  • Ho, o, oH, HoH > *h3e, e, *eh3, *Hew

Inheritances: kʼhohr > *kohr > *kerh3 (variant *ker from *kor) hoħd > *h1od > *h3ed ħoħd > *h2od > *h3ed ... > *poh2 > *peh3 (*puH) pʰol > bʰel "shine"

  • h1oh1 > *h1ews

Borrowings: pohar [Diluvian] > *pawar (*paw-(a)-ar) > *péh2wr̥ (pew-r̥)

  • h1engʷ < *h1ew-ǵenh1-yéti

-

  • Hō, ō, ōH, HōH > *h3u, h3, *uh3, *Hu

Inheritances: Borrowings: -

  • Ha, *a, *aH, *HaH > *h2e, *h2, *eh2, *h2e

Inheritances: phah > *pʰah > *bʰeh2 Borrowings: -

  • ā > ...

Inheritances: Borrowings: -

  • a > *e/o

Inheritances: ə > *(á)as > *(é)os Borrowings: -

  • He, *e, *eH, HeH > *h1e, *h1, *eh1, *h1e

Inheritances: heħd > *h1ed > *h1ed Borrowings: -

  • Hē, *ē, *ēH, HēH > ...

Inheritances: Borrowings: -

  • Hi, i, iH, HiH > *ye, *i, *ey, *ye

Inheritances: Borrowings: -

  • Hī, ī, īH, HīH > h1ey, ey, eyh1, h1ey

Inheritances: ʕii̯h > *ī > *h1ey Borrowings: +

  • ew > eh3 [see: *gdew > deh3]
  • aw > ew [see: kʰaw-ás > ḱlew]

+ h4- > s-

heħʘ̪ > h1eh2dʷ [nominative *séh2dʷ (=**h1éh2dʷ-as)] > *sweh2dʷ- > suavis there can only be one laryngeal in a root... except when former clicks.

*meh2dʷ (=**h1eh2dʷ-más) > *médʰu [*mélid, a variation]

dʷ- > *b-~bʰ-, -dʷ > -d dʲ- > *s~*sw-, -dʲ > -di

  • h2oh2dʲ-, *h2óh2dʲam "hatred"

? > *ak "sharp" borrowing

  • dʲairgʰ > *swergʰ... "be ill"

sour < *sūrós (*sweh2-rós) < *dʲāyrás (=*dʲeh2-rás)

h2isṓm/aísmi, h2isṓmas/aísmas > *h1ésmi, *h1smós h2isḗs/aíssi, h2isḗtas/aístas > *h1ési, *h1sté (*h1stés 2P.DUAL) h2isī́t/aísti, h2isī́nt/aísant> *h1ésti, *h1sénti

  • /ə/ > */e/ when pretonic or tonic polysyllabic [exception: o-derivation]
  • /ə/ > */o/ when postonic or tonic monosyllabic (*pʰ∅rás > *pʰárs >*pʰórs > *pʰṓr) [exception: o-derivation] *monosyllabic words without pithc accept /e/ instead (*swa > *swe)
  • /əi̯/ > */e/, */aː/ when result of zero-grade (*gain- >*g∅n-tás > *gnaitás > *gnātós, as in Latin gnātus and Greek -γνητός)
  • /ai̯/ > */ai̯/
  • kʰpʰ-
  • kp- > *kʷʰ-
  • kn- > *sn-
  • h2i (TD) > *h1e (PIE)

an original click as onset inverts the laryngeals: ǁheħp > tɬeh1p> seh1p an original click as coda preserves both laryngeals: heħʘ̪ > *h1eh2dʷ > sweh2d həħǁ > *h1ah2t͡ɬ > *sent

When an <e> is introduced in adjectives, the accent falls n̠ʕih > *knaiás > *sénos "old" compare

  • sādú > *swādús "sweet"
  • sādú méh2dʷ
  • swādús médʰu~mélid

Primordial elements transitioned into particles in Aryan. That is: Aryan roots could be changed back then. Those were the mobile roots. For example: *dʷ survived as PIE *-id, which was a particle used to indicate comestibles.

  • pʰrás

laryngeals turn into vowels and vice-versa

  • mai > *meh1

?we are searching for a single voiceless plosive before a voiced one? ?"Aryan doesn't accept initial voiced clusters of original implosives? As if **dbíoh1 > *díopʰ "?


h1uC ~ h1oC > uj ~ oj h1aC ~ h1əC > aj ~ i h1iC ~ h1eC > ī ~ ej Cuh1 ~ Coh1 > uj ~ oj Cah1 ~ Cəh1 > aj ~ i Cih1 ~ Ceh1 > ī ~ ej - h2uC ~ h2oC > aw ~ ow h2aC ~ h2əC > ā ~ i h2iC ~ h2eC > aj ~ ej Cuh2 ~ Coh2 > aw ~ ow Cah2 ~ Cəh2 > ā ~ i Cih2 ~ Ceh2 > aj ~ ej - h3uC ~ h3oC > ū ~ ow h3aC ~ h3əC > wa ~ u h3iC ~ h3eC > ī ~ je Cuh3 ~ Coh3 > ū~ ow Cah3 ~ Cəh3 > wa ~ u Cih3 ~ Ceh3 > iw ~ ew



Sanskrit Avestan O.C.S. Lithuanian Albanian Armenian Hittite Tocharian Greek Latin Goidelic Gothic
>*p p; pʰ p; f p p p h; w p; pp p p / pt p f; β
>*t x x
>*k x x
>*ḱ x x

p pt p ∅ f; b [β] [C 6] f; v, f[C 2]


thorn clusters, *sD, *sR, ? *ts, ? Bartholomae's law...
Table 1. Reflexes of Proto-Indo-European single consonants
PIE Indo-Iranian Balto-Slavic Alb. Arm. Anatol. Toch. Greek Italic Celtic Germanic
Sanskrit Avestan O.C.S. Lith. Hitt. Latin Old Irish Gothic English
normal C+[j] [C 1] normal -C- [C 2] [C 1]
*p p; ph [pʰ] [C 3] p; f [C 4] p h;
w [C 5]
p, pp p pt p f;
b [β] [C 6]
f;
v, f[C 2]
*t t; th [t̪ʰ] [C 3] t; θ[C 4] t tʿ [tʰ] t, tt;
z [ts] [C 7]
t;
c [c] [C 7]
t s; tt/ss[C 5] t t th [θ] þ [θ];
d [ð]; [C 6]
th;
d; [C 6]
*ḱ ś [ɕ] s š [ʃ] th [θ];
k[C 8]
s k, kk k;
ś [ɕ][C 8]
k c [k] c [k] ch [x] h;
g [ɣ] [C 6]
h;
;[C 2]
y [C 6]
*k k; c [t͡ɕ]; [C 7]
kh [kʰ] [C 3]
k; c [tʃ]; [C 7]
x[C 4]
k;
č [tʃ]; [C 7]
c [ts][C 9]
k k;
q [c][C 9]
kʿ [kʰ]
*kʷ k;
s; [C 7]
q [c][C 9]
ku, kku p;
t; [C 7]
k[C 10]
qu [kʷ];
c [k] [C 11]
ƕ [ʍ];
gw, w [C 6]
wh;
w [C 6]
*b b; bh [C 3] b; β [C 12] b p b pt b b [b] -[β]- p
*d d; dh [C 3] d; δ [C 12] d d;
dh [ð][C 2]
t ts;
ś [ɕ] [C 7]
d z [zd] > [z] d d [d] -[ð]- t
j [d͡ʑ];
h [ɦ] [C 3]
z ž [ʒ] dh [ð];
g[C 8]
c [ts] k k;
ś [ɕ][C 8]
g g g [ɡ] -[ɣ]- k c / k;
ch[C 9]
*g g; j [d͡ʑ]; [C 7]
gh; [C 3] h [ɦ] [C 3]
g; j [dʒ]; [C 7]
γ [C 12]
g;
ž [ʒ]; [C 7]
dz[C 9]
g g k
*gʷ g;
z; [C 7]
gj [ɟ][C 9]
ku b;
d; [C 7]
g[C 10]
u [w > v];
gu [ɡʷ] [C 13]
b [b] -[β]- q [kʷ] qu
*pʰ bh [bʱ] b; β [C 12] b b;
w[C 2]
p ph [pʰ] pt f;[C 14]
b
b [b];
b [β];[C 2]
f [C 15]
b;
v / f[C 16]
*tʰ dh [dʱ] d; δ [C 12] d t t;
c [c] [C 7]
th [tʰ] tt/ss f;[C 14]
d;
b [C 17]
d [d] -[ð]- d;
d [ð];[C 2]
þ [C 15]
d
*ǵʰ h [ɦ] z ž [ʒ] dh [ð];
d[C 8]
j [dz];
z[C 2]
k k;
ś [ɕ] [C 7]
kh [kʰ] h;
h / g[C 8]
g [ɡ] -[ɣ]- g;
g [ɣ];[C 2]
g [x] [C 15]
g;
y / w[C 16]
*gʰ gh [ɡʱ];
h [ɦ] [C 7]
g; j [dʒ]; [C 7]
γ [C 12]
g;
ž [ʒ]; [C 7]
dz[C 9]
g g g;
ǰ [dʒ] [C 7]
*gʷʰ g;
z; [C 7]
gj [ɟ][C 9]
ku ph [pʰ];
th [tʰ]; [C 7]
kh [kʰ][C 10]
f;[C 14]
g /
u [w];[C 2]
gu [ɡʷ] [C 13]
g;
b;[C 14]
w;[C 2]
gw [C 13]
g;
b;[C 14]
w[C 2]
*s s h [h, x] s sh [ʃ];
gj [ɟ];[C 18]
h[C 2]
h;
[C 2]
š [s] s;
[ʂ]
h;[C 14]
s;[C 19][C 15]/
;[C 2]
[¯] [C 20]
i s;
r[C 2]
s ʃ -[h]- s;
z [C 6]
s;
r [C 6]
[ʂ][C 21] š [ʃ][C 21] x [x][C 21] š [ʃ][C 21]
*m m in m m [m] -[w̃]- m
*-m [C 15] m ˛ [˜] n n n -- m [˜] n
*n n n;
˛ [˜] [C 15]
n n;
ñ [ɲ]
n in n
*l r (dial. l) r l l;
ll [ɫ][C 2]
l /
ɫ
> ɣ]
l il l
*r r/l[C 22] r r [ɾ];
rr [r][C 2]
r ir r
*y y [j] j [j] gj [ɟ];
y [j] z [zd] > [z] /
h;
[C 2]
?i i [j];
[C 2]
j y
*w v [ʋ] v [w] v v [ʋ] v g / w w w > h / ∅ i u [w > v] f -- w
PIE Skr. Av. O.C.S. Lith. Alb. Arm. Hitt. Toch. Greek Greek+/j/ Latin Old Irish Gothic English

Notes for table 1:

  1. ^ a b A capital C stands for consonant in this table
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Between vowels
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Before an original h₂.
  4. ^ a b c Before a consonant or original laryngeal.
  5. ^ a b After a vowel.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Following an unstressed vowel (Verner's law).
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Before a (PIE) front vowel (*i, *e).
  8. ^ a b c d e f Before a sonorant.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h Before secondary (post-PIE) front-vowels.
  10. ^ a b c Before or after a (PIE) u
  11. ^ Before or after a (PIE) rounded vowel (*u, *o).
  12. ^ a b c d e f In Younger Avestan, after a vowel.
  13. ^ a b c After n.
  14. ^ a b c d e f At the beginning of a word
  15. ^ a b c d e f At the end of a word.
  16. ^ a b Between vowels, or between a vowel and r, l (on either side)
  17. ^ After u, r or before r, l.
  18. ^ Before a stressed vowel
  19. ^ Before or after an obstruent (p, t, k, etc.; s)
  20. ^ Before or after a resonant (r, l, m, n).
  21. ^ a b c d After r, u, k, i (Ruki sound law).
  22. ^ rare

Consonant clusters

Proto-Indo-European also had numerous consonant clusters, such as *st, *ḱs. In most cases in most languages, each consonant in a cluster develops according to the normal development given in the table above. Many consonant clusters however also show special developments in multiple languages. Some of these are given by the following table (with cases of otherwise predictable development in gray):

Table 2. Reflexes of Proto-Indo-European consonant clusters
PIE Indo-Iranian Balto-Slavic Alb. Arm. Anatol. Toch. Greek Italic Celtic Germanic
Skr. Av. O.C.S. Lith. Hitt. Latin Old Irish Gothic English
normal C+[j]
*sr sr r str sr rr [r] (a)r š(ša)r ʃʃr rh n/a fr-, -br- sr str str
*tw tv θβ tv tv t kʿ [kʰ] ttu, ddu s-, -ss- n/a p? t þw thw
*dʰw dhv ðβ dv dv d ? tu, du f d dw dw
*dw dv (e)rk tu, du b tw tw
*tl sl kl, sl tl kl tl
*dl ll
*dn nn, ṇṇ
*ḱw śv sp sv šv s sk, š n/a qu [kʷ] cu [kʷ] Template:Transl [xʷ] wh
*ǵʰw hv zv žv z
*ǵw jv q [kʷ] qu [kw]
*sw sv xuu [xʷ] sv sv v, d[CC 1] kʿ [kʰ] normal dev. h n/a su [sw] s sw sw
*sp sp sp [CC 2] sp f sp [CC 2]
/ pʿ [pʰ]
normal dev. sp [CC 2] ? sp f sp [CC 3]
*sbʰ spʰ
*sd d; ḷ[CC 4] > ḍ, ḍḍ zd zd zd st d -t- [d] st st
*sdʰ dh; ḷh[CC 4] > ḍh, ḍḍh zd zd zd sth -t- [d] zd d
*st st; ṣṭ[CC 4] st [CC 2] st sht [ʃt] st [CC 2] normal dev. st [CC 2] s; tt/ss[CC 5] st st [CC 3]
*sḱ ch [t͡ɕʰ]; cch[CC 5] s? sk š? h ?? č`; c`[CC 5] normal dev. sk; [CC 2]
kh [kʰ];[CC 6]
skh [skʰ] [CC 7]
sc [sk] sc [sk] sk [CC 3] sh [ʃ]
*sk sk, {śc, ch}[CC 8] sk, sč [CC 2] normal dev. ? sk [CC 2] normal dev.
*skʷ norm. squ [skʷ] sq [CC 3]
*t+t [tst] tt; tth [CC 9] st; ?[CC 10] st s s? zt, zzašt, zzazz [tst] ss? st ss ss / st
*sǵ jj
*sgʰ jj[CC 8]
*dt tt st st st s ss ss [s]
*ddʰ ddʰ zd d t
*dʰt ddʰ zd, st st st
*pt pt ft t? pt t pt pt cht [xt] ft [CC 3]
*ḱt ṣṭ [ʂʈ] št [ʃt] st št [ʃt] kt ct [kt] ht [CC 3] ght [t] [CC 3]
*kt kt xt t? kt
*kʷt pt ct [kt]
*ps ps ps ps s, ss fs ps
*ts ts
*ḱs kṣ š sh [ʃ] ks x [ks] hs x [ks]
*ks kṣ[CC 4] [CC 4] (ks)
*kʷs kʷs ps x [ks]
*gs kṣ
*gʷs kṣ
*ǵʰs kṣ ž ks
*gʰs kṣ
*gʷʰs kṣ ps
*tḱ kṣ š k kt s
*tk kṣ kt
*dʰǵʰ kṣ z ž tk tk/k khth
*dʰgʰ kṣ tk
*dʰgʷʰ kṣ γž kts phth s
PIE Skr. Av. O.C.S. Lith. Alb. Arm. Hitt. Toch. Greek Greek+/j/ Latin Old Irish Gothic English


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Orthography

Trad. PIE Laryng. PIE Skr. Av. O.C.S. Lith. Arm. Alb. Toch. Hitt. Greek Latin[V 1] Proto-Celtic Gothic[V 2] Old English[V 1]
normal umlauted[V 3]
*e *e, *h₁e a e je, ie, e, i; ja[V 4] ä e, ʔe, i e i; [ɛ][V 5] e; eo[V 6] i; ie[V 6]
*a (*a[V 7]), *h₂e o a a ha, a ā ha, a a a æ; a;[V 8] ea[V 6] e; ie[V 6]
*o *h₃e o, a a a, e a o
*o a; ā[V 9]
[V 10] *h₁[V 10] i i, ∅ a, ∅ ā e a a, ∅
*h₂[V 10] a
*h₃[V 10] o
*- *h₁-[V 11] e (a?) a, ∅ e (o)
*h₂-[V 11] a ḫa a
*h₃-[V 11] a, ha o
, *eh₁ ā ě ė i o, ua a/e?; ā?[V 12] ē, e, i ē ī ē ǣ
([V 7]), *eh₂ a o [oː] a a/o? a, ah ā > ē[V 13] ā ā ō ē
, *eh₃ uo u e a/ā?; ū?[V 12] a, ā ō ā; ū[V 12]
*i *i i ь i i i; e[V 14] ä i, ī i i; [ɛ][V 5] i
*ih₁ ī i y [iː] i i ī ī ei [iː] ī
*ih₂ i
or (j)a?[V 15]
ī or (j)ā?[V 15]
*ih₃ ī or (j)ō?[V 15]
*ei *ei, *h₁ei ai > ē ai > ōi,
āi > aē[V 9]
ei; ie[V 16] i e ē ei ī ē
*oi *oi, *h₃ei ě ai; ie[V 16] e e, ai ē, ai oi ū oi ái ā ǣ
*ai (*ai[V 7]), *h₂ei ai ae ai
*ēi *ēi āi > ai; ā[V 12] āi; ā(i)[V 12] i i ē ēi ī? ei [iː] ī
*ōi *ōi (*oei) y; u[V 12] ai; ui[V 12] e, ai ai ōi ō u[V 12] ái ā ǣ
*āi *eh₂ei ě ai āi > ēi[V 13] ae
*u *u u ъ u u u; y[V 17] ä u u u u; o[V 18] u; [ɔ][V 5] u; o[V 19] y
*uh₁ ū y ū y; i[V 12] u ū ū ȳ
*uh₂ u
or (w)a?[V 15]
ū or (w)ā?[V 15]
*uh₃ ū or (w)ō?[V 15]
*eu *eu, *h₁eu au > ō ə̄u; ao[V 9] ju iau oy e u eu ū ou iu ēo īe
*ou *ou,*h₃eu u au a o, au ou áu ēa
*au (*au[V 7]), *h₂eu aw au au
*ēu *ēu āu > au āu u iau e ū? iu ēo
*ōu *ōu a au ō áu ēa
*m̥ *m̥ a ę im̃; um̃[V 20] am a äm a, un a em em, am um um ym
*m̥̅ *mh₁ ā ìm; ùm[V 20] ama
*mh₂ mā > mē[V 13]
*mh₃
*m̥m *m̥m am ьm/ъm im; um[V 20] am am em am
*n̥ *n̥ a ę ; [V 20] an än an a en en, an un un yn
*n̥̄ *nh₁ ā ìn; ùn[V 20] ana
*nh₂ nā > nē [V 13]
*nh₃
*n̥n *n̥n an ьn/ъn ; [V 20] an an en an
*l̥ *l̥ ərə lь/lъ il̃; ul̃[V 20] al il, li; ul, lu äl al la ol li;[V 21] al ul ul; ol[V 19] yl
*l̥̄ *lh₁ īr; ūr[V 22] arə ìl; ùl[V 20] ala al
*lh₂ lā > lē[V 13]
*lh₃
*l̥l *l̥l ir; ur[V 22] ar ьl/ъl il; ul[V 20] al, la al el al
*r̥ *r̥ ərə rь/rъ ir̃; ur̃[V 20] ar ir, ri; ur, ru är ar, ur ra or ri;[V 21] ar aúr [ɔr] ur; or[V 19] yr
*r̥̄ *rh₁ īr; ūr[V 22] arə ìr; ùr[V 20] ara ra
*rh₂ rā > rē[V 13]
*rh₃
*r̥r *r̥r ir; ur[V 22] ar ьr/ъr ir; ur[V 20] ar ar ar ar
Trad. PIE Laryng. PIE Skr. Av. O.C.S. Lith. Arm. Alb. Toch. Hitt. Greek Latin[V 1] Proto-Celtic Gothic[V 2] normal umlauted[V 3]
Old English[V 1]

Historical and Geographical Distribution

Since Lazaridis et al's paper[2], absence of Eastern European Hunter-Gatherer (EHG) ancestry in the Anatolian component of the Indo-European speaking populations has suggested a caucasian homeleand for earlier stages of PIE rather than a pre-Yamnaya pontic continuance. Recent studies[3][4], furthermore, point to a total farming economy by the Zagros around 6,000 BC, which tempts an older dating for a Transitional Dialect such as Aryan.

Phonology

Consonants

Aryan is reconstructed as having 36 consonants, with an assumption made that it would have maintained the inventory of the Pangaean Code in some form.

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Pharyngeal Glottal
Nasal Voiceless *m̥ *n̥
Voiced *m *n
Plosive Voiceless *p *t *k
Voiced *b *d *dʲ *dʷ *g
Aspirated *ph *th *kh
Murmured *bɦ *dɦ *gɦ
Fricative Voiceless *s *x *h
Voiced *z
Vibrant Voiceless *r̥
Voiced *r
Lateral Voiceless *l̥ *t͡ɬ
Voiced *l
Approximant Voiceless *j̊ *ẘ
Voiced *j *w

Vowels

Monophthongs
Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid e ə əː o
Open a
   
Diphthongs
Front Central Back
Close u̯i i̯u
Mid ei̯ eu̯ əi̯ əu̯ oi̯ ou̯
Open i̯a u̯a ai̯ au̯
   
Triphthongs
Front Central Back
Close u̯iᵊ i̯uᵊ
Mid ei̯ᵊ eu̯ᵊ əi̯ᵊ əu̯ᵊ oi̯ᵊ ou̯ᵊ
Open i̯aᵊ u̯aᵊ ai̯ᵊ au̯ᵊ

Pitch Accent

Morphology

Affix

  • gʷaináh0
  • gʷaināsyas
  • gʷaināsay, *gʷaināmas

Root

In Aryan, roots are either static or mobile. In the first case, they serve as a prototypical source of meaning, impossible to be further decomposed. Otherwise, further analysis is possible through pure consonantal and vocalic segments, treated as "fundamental atoms".

A consonantal root is intrinsically modified by vocalic roots.

  • pʰair < action root *p "bearing" + class root *h5ih1 "person" + epenthetic *r

Clitic

In Aryan, clitics, similarly to tones, became fossilized as affixes.

Ablaut

Noun

German:

dieser Mensch
dies-er Mensch
DEITIC.PROXIMAL-MASCULINE.SINGULAR.NOMINATIVE person
"this" "person"
this person

Russian:

этот человек
эт-от человек
DEITIC-MASCULINE.SINGULAR.NOMINATIVE person.NOMINATIVE
"this" "person"
this person

Latin:

iste homo
iste homo
DEITIC.PROXIMAL .NOMINATIVE person.NOMINATIVE
"that" "person"
that person

Greek:

οὗτος ἄνθρωπος
οὗτ-ος ἄνθρωπ-ος
DEITIC.PROXIMAL-MASCULINE.SINGULAR.NOMINATIVE person-MASCULINE.SINGULAR.NOMINATIVE
"this" "person"
this person

Aryan:

*aestad naī́r
*aes-tad *naī́r
MASCULINE.3PERSON-DEITIC.3PERSON.SINGULAR.NOMINATIVE man.SINGULAR.NOMINATIVE
"this" "man"
this person

The above samples follow the term *tad instead of *sa, as the former is used to refer to third person in general. *sa *tad <

  • h0e * eah0 *as *ats
    • pʰirás > pʰā́r = *dʰgʰūmás > *gʰā́mar, *gʰā́man
    • pʰerós > *phṓr dʰ

aes, eah0, ad, sa [animated distal], tad [inanimated distal], aestad, eātad, atad


German:

Masculine Feminine Neuter Plural
Nominative -er[1][2] -∅[3],-e[4] -e[1][4][5], -ie[2], -∅[3] -es[1], -as[2], -∅[3], -e[4] -e[1][3][6], -ie[2], -en[4][5], -er[7]
Genitive -es[2][3][6][7], -en[1][4] -er[1][2][3], -en[4] -es[2][3], -en[1][4] -er[1][2][3], -en[4]
Dative -em[1][2][3], -en[4], -e[6][7] -er[1][2][3], -en[4] -em[1][2][3], -en[4] -en[1][2][3][4][6][7]
Accusative -en[1][2][3][4] -e[1][3][4], -ie[2] -es[1][5], -as[2], -e[4] -e[1][3], -ie[2], -en[4]

^1 Declension of adjectives without articles; ^2 Declension of definite articles; ^3 Declension of indefinite articles; ^4 Declension of adjectives with articles; ^5 Declension of regular feminine nouns; ^6 Declension of regular masculine nouns; ^7 Declension of regular neuter nouns.

Russian:

Masculine Feminine Neuter Plural
Nominative -от[1], -ый[2], -ин[3], -∅/-ь[7][9] -а/-я[1][4][5], -ая[2], -ина[3], -ь[9] [1], -ое[2], -ино[3], -о/-е[8], -мя[9] -и/ы[1][4][5][7], -ые[2], -ины[3], -а/-я[8], -и/-мена[9]
Genitive -ого[1][2], -иного[3], -а/-я[7], -и[9] -ой[1][2], -иной[3], -и/ы[4][5][6][9] -ого[1][2], -иного[3], -а/-я[8], -мени[9] -их[1], -ых[2], -иных[3], -∅/-ь[4][5], -ов/-ей[6][7], ∅-/-(е)й[8], -ей/-мён(-мян)[9]
Dative -ому[1][2], -иному[3], -у/-ю[7], -и[9] -ой[1][2], -иной[3], -е[4][5], -и[9] -ому[1][2], -иному[3], -у/-ю[8], -мени[9] -им[1], -ым[2], -иным[3], -ам/-ям[4][5][6][7][8], -ям/-менам[9]
Accusative.A -ого[1][2], -иного[3], -а/-я[7], -ь[9] -ту[1], -ую[2], -ину[3], -у[4][5][6], -ь[9] [1], -ое[2], -ино[3], -о/-е[8], -мя[9] -их[1], -ых[2], -иных[3], -∅/ь[4][5][6], -ов/-ей[7], -а/-я[8], -и/-мена[9]
Accusative.I -от[1], -ый[2], -ин[3], -∅/-ь[7] -ту[1], -ую[2], -ину[3], -у[4][5][6] [1], -ое[2], -ино[3], -о/-е[8] -и/-ы[1][7], -ые[2], -ины[3], -∅/-ь[4][5][6], ∅-/-(е)й[8], -ь/-мена[9]
Instrumental -им[1], -ым[2], -иным[3], -ом/-ем[7], -ью[9] -ой/-ою//-ей[1][2][4][5][6], -иной/-иною[3], -ю[6], -ью[9] -им[1], -ым[2], -иным[3], -ом/-ем[8], -менем[9] -ими[1], -ыми[2], -иными[3], -ами/-ями[4][5][6][7][8], -ями(ьми)/-менами[9]
Prepositional -ом[1][2], -ином[3], -е[7], -и[9] -ой[1][2], -иной[3], -е[4][5][6], -и[9] -ом[1][2], -ином[3], -е[8], -мени[9] -их[1], -ых[2], -иных[3], -ах/-ях[4][5][6][7][8], -ях/-менах[9]

^1 Declension of correlatives; ^2 Declension of non-possessive adjectives; ^3 Declension of possessive adjectives; ^4 Declension of animated feminine nouns ending in a palatal consonant and vowel; ^5 Declension of animated feminine nouns ending in a hard consonant and vowel or inanimated feminine nouns ending in a palatal consonant and vowel; ^6 Declension of inanimated feminine nouns ending in a palatal consonant and no vowel; ^7 Declension of animated masculine nouns ending in no vowel; ^8 Declension of neuter nouns; ^9 Declension of nouns ending in hard consonant and no vowel.

LATIN DECLENSION
Singular Plural
Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative -e/-us[1], -us, -is, -us/-ū, -(i)ēs -a[1], -is, -us/-ū, -(i)ēs -ud, -um[1], -e, -us/-ū, -(i)ēs [1], -ēs, -ūs/-ua, -(i)ēs -ae[1], -ēs, -ūs/-ua, -(i)ēs -a[1], -ia, -ūs/-ua, -(i)ēs
Genitive -īus[1], -ī, -is, -ūs, -(i)ēī -īus[1], -ae, -ūs, -(i)ēī -īus[1], -ī, -is, -ūs, -(i)ēī -ōrum[1], -ium, -um, -uum, -(i)ērum -ārum[1], -ium, -um, -uum, -(i)ērum -ōrum[1], -ium, -um, -uum, -(i)ērum
Dative [1], -ō, -uī/-ū, -(i)ēī [1], -ae, -uī/-ū, -(i)ēī [1][3], -ō, -uī/-ū, -(i)ēī -īs[1], -ibus, -(i)ēbus -īs[1], -ibus, -(i)ēbus -īs[1], -ibus, -(i)ēbus
Accusative -um[1], -em, -um/-ū, -(i)em -am[1], -em, -um/-ū, -(i)em -ud, -um[1], -e, -um/-ū, -(i)em -ōs[1], -ēs, -ūs/-ua, -(i)ēs -ās[1], -ēs, -ūs/-ua, -(i)ēs -a[1], -ia, -ūs/-ua, -(i)ēs
Ablative [1][2], -ī, -ū, -(i)ē [1], -ī, -ū, -(i)ē [1], -ī, -ū, -(i)ē -īs[1], -ibus, -(i)ēbus -īs[1], -ibus, -(i)ēbus -īs[1], -ibus, -(i)ēbus
Vocative -e[1], -is -a[1], -is -ud, -um[1], -e [1], -ēs -ae[1], -ēs, -a[1], -ia

^1 Declension of correlatives and regular nouns.

GREEK DECLENSION
Singular Dual Plural
Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative -ος[1], -ας/-ης, -(ε)ς, -ων -η/α[1], -(ε)ς, -ων -ον[1] [1], -ε, -ονε [1], -ε, -ονε [1] -οι[1], -ες, -ονες -αι[1], -ες
Genitive -ου[1], -ος/-ως, -ονος -ης/-ας[1], -ος/-ως, -ονος -ου[1] -οιν[1] -αιν[1], -οιν, -ονοιν -οιν[1], -ονοιν -ων[1], -ονων -ων[1], -ονων -ων[1]
Dative -ῳ[1], -ι, -ονι -ῃ[1], -ι, -ονι -ῳ[1] -οιν[1], -ονοιν -αιν[1], -οιν, -ονοιν -οιν[1] -οις[1], -ας/-ς/-νς, -οσι -αις[1], -οσι -οις[1]
Accusative -ον[1], -α, -ονα -ην[1], -ονα -ον[1] [1] [1] [1] -ους[1], -ονας -ας[1], -ονας [1]
Vocative [1], -(ε)ς, -ον [1], -(ε)ς, -ον -ον[1] [1], -ε, -ονε [1], -ε, -ονε [1] -οι[1], -ες, -ονες -αι[1], -ες, -ονες [1]

^1 Declension of correlatives and regular nouns.


ARYAN DECLENSION
Singular Dual Plural
Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative *-as *-ah0 *-am *-ā *-āh0 *-ā *-ayn *-ah0in *-a
Genitive *-asyas *-āsyas -ου[1] -οιν[1] -αιν[1], -οιν, -ονοιν -οιν[1], -ονοιν -ων[1], -ονων -ων[1], -ονων -ων[1]
Dative -ῳ[1], -ι, -ονι -ῃ[1], -ι, -ονι -ῳ[1] -οιν[1], -ονοιν -αιν[1], -οιν, -ονοιν -οιν[1] -οις[1], -ας/-ς/-νς, -οσι -αις[1], -οσι -οις[1]
Accusative -ον[1], -α, -ονα -ην[1], -ονα -ον[1] [1] [1] [1] -ους[1], -ονας -ας[1], -ονας [1]
Vocative [1], -(ε)ς, -ον [1], -(ε)ς, -ον -ον[1] [1], -ε, -ονε [1], -ε, -ονε [1] -οι[1], -ες, -ονες -αι[1], -ες, -ονες [1]

diese schöne Kone эта красивая жена ista pulchra uxor

  • eātad kaláh0 gʷaînah0

Pronoun

Verb

*gaínōm, *gígnmi "I generate" *pūhāṓm, *píbmi "I drink" *wehdḗyōm, *wḗydmi "I see"

  • gánas > γόνος "offspring"

Initial clusters in the Nominative will give way to /ə/

  • ptā́r (A)> *patḗr (PIE)
  • páh5man > *póh5mn̥ > πῶμα "slid"

[*peh5] "feed, protect"



*pʰair- "bearing" [n/v] (Latin ferō, Greek φέρω < *pʰaírōm, *pʰíprmi) > *pʰaíras [bare noun], *pʰ∅rás "bearer" [adjective-noun] (Latin fūr, Greek φώρ "thief"), *pʰáras [result-noun] (Greek φόρος "tribute")

*daim- "building" [n/v] (Greek δέμω < *daímōm, *dídmmi) > *daímas [bare noun], *d∅más "building" [adjective-noun] (Greek δῶ "house"), *dámas "house" [result-noun] (Latin domus, Greek δόμος "house")

*paid- "stepping" [n/v] (*paídōm, *pípdmi) > *paídas [bare noun], *p∅dás "foot" [adjective-noun] (Latin pes, Greek πούς "foot"), *pádas "step" [result-noun]

*kpain- "killing" [n/v] (Proto-Indo-European *kʷʰen, Latin de-fendo "I expell from") > *kpaínas [bare noun], *kp∅nás "murderer" [adjective-noun], *kpánas "murder" [result-noun] (Greek φόνος "murder")

*h1ed- "eating" [n/v] (German esse, Russian ем, Latin edō, Greek ἔδω < *h1édōm, *yédmi) > *h1édas [bare noun], *yedás "eater" [adjective-noun], *h1ádas [result-noun]



In Aryan, personal enclitics are positioned after the first word of a proposition (Wackernagel's Law)

the verb either starts or ends the clause... tendence to follow SOV


  • the finite verb loses accent in an independent clause, except when in first position (always has accent in dependent clause)
  • absolute construction
  • subject is ommitted
  • na pʰaírīt mai
  • pʰaírīt mai na?

h5ígōm, mayás, mai

_(negation=subject/int.pronoun/accented verb)-_()-_(unaccented verb)

The most comprehensive summary available on PIE morphosyntax was written by Matthias Fritz in Indo-European Linguistics (Michael Meier-Brügger, 2003), pp. 238-276.

Winfred Philipp Lehmann’s Proto-Indo-European Syntax (1974)

morphological cylce (Hock and Joseph, 1996) Szemerényi 1957: 119; Kuryłowicz 1964: 233; Rasmussen 1999: Meier-Brügger

-ōm/mi -āṓm/-mā

  • pʰaír-

-ōm / *-mi (perfective)

  • -āṓm / *-āmi (perfective)

í (animated nouns) ì (inanimate nouns) *neuter nouns and vocatives have recessive accent Aryan has a complex system of accent loss

As Greek neuter nouns possess recessive accent (especially the monosyllabic ones, which when accented, carry a circunflex)

  • paid- ... *p∅dás
  • p∅dás > páds > póds
  • p∅dás > *póds > pēs, πούς
  • p∅dasyás > *pedés > pedis, ποδός

Derivational Morphology

Syntax

I am still here Je suis encore ici Ich bin noch hier Я все ещё здесь Hic adhuc sum

Ich dachte, dass ich der Einzige war, der darüber nachdachte Я думал я один кто об этом подумал...

sie sagen, dass morgen will ich arbeiten, um Geld zu verdienen; ich, wer wusste nichts darüber

ils disent que demain je veux travailler pour gagner d'argent; moi, qui n'y savais rien pas

Subordinate clause... in German, Russian, Latin, and Greek:

Sie sagen, dass morgen will ich arbeiten, um Geld zu verdienen.
Они говорят, что завстра я хачу работат, чтобы зарабатывать деньге.
Illi dicent me cras laborare volo ut pecuniam meream.
They say I want to work tomorrow in order to earn money.


movement verbs and cases: cubitum ire *as French and German treat it in the european sprachbund eo domum end goal: accusative

  • h2iyṓm dámam

Sample text

References

  • Behaghel, Otto (1932), Deutsche Syntax
  • Benveniste, Émile (1935), Les Origines de la Formation des Noms en Indo-Européen
  • Collinge, N. E. (1985), The Laws of Indo-European
  • Jespersen , Otto (1924), The Philosophy Of Grammar
  • Priscianus (6th Century), Institutiones Grammaticae
  • Sütterlin, Ludwig (1908), Die Lehre von der Lautbildung
  • Szemerényi, Oswald (1970), Einführung in die vergleichende Sprachwissenschaft
  • Sommerstein, Alan (1973), Sound Pattern of Ancient Greek
  • Thomasus Erfordiensis (13th Century), Tractatus de Modis Significandi seu Grammatica Speculativa
  • Wackernagel, Jakob (1892), Über ein Gesetz der indogermanischen Worstellung

https://archive.org/details/bomhardtheoriginsofprotoindoeuropean/page/n1/mode/2up

https://www.academia.edu/40559059/The_Precursors_of_Proto_Indo_European_The_Indo_Anatolian_and_Indo_Uralic_Hypotheses_2019_

The Origin of the Caland System and the Typology of Adjectives

https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/if-2024-0008/html

Indo-European Phonology

  1. ^ Lazaridis et al (2022), The genetic history of the Southern Arc: a bridge between West Asia and Europe
  2. ^ Lazaridis et al (2022), The genetic history of the Southern Arc: a bridge between West Asia and Europe
  3. ^ Brami (2019), Anatolia: from the origins of agriculture to the spread of Neolithic economies
  4. ^ Ulas et al (2024), Drawing diffusion patterns of Neolithic agriculture in Anatolia
  5. ^ 3


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