Lakovic languages
- Not to be confused with the Lahob languages.
Swadesh lists for the Lakovic languages
Lakovic | |
---|---|
Created by | – |
Geographic distribution | Originally Bjeheond, Talma and Txapoalli; today worldwide |
Linguistic classification | One of Tricin's primary language families |
Proto-language | Proto-Lakovic |
Subdivisions |
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The Lakovic languages (/ləˈkoʊvɪk/ lə-KOH-vik; Windermere: fi imbrits Lăcof) are a major Trician language family, originally native to Bjeheond. The family is inspired by Semitic, Mon-Khmer and Austronesian languages.
The family is named after *ləkof, the PLak reconstructed word for 'human'.
Some people put Arpalan, Lakovic, Pategic, and Clofabosin into a macrofamily.
Roots from Netagin (to be used in PLak)
- n-s-d: learn
- w-x-s: love
- b-n-s: hide
- l-z-f: poke
- z-ħ-m: praise, honor
- ŋ-þ-w: new
- x-3-f: reason
- h-ŋ-c: empty, null
- ħ-d-x: warm
- c-ŋ-t: garden, horticulture
- g-m-z: letter, element
- ŋ-b-ś: compassion, sympathy
- f-ś-r: agree, blend
- n-b-ś: courage
- þ-f-x: know
- y-r-f: roll
- f-c-m: read
- l-x-r: write
- z-r-b: true, firm
- ś-d-l: half, split
- f-s-t: step, stage
- ʔ-b-l: mind
- w-t-f: die
- þ-ŋ-b: measure
- z-m-z-m: hesitate
- s-w-ħ: king, rule
- ħ-c-g: value
- ʔ-t-r: punish
- g-b-n: say
- k-l-k-l: tile
- b-s-ŋ: clan, family
- b-c-3: force, coerce
- r-ʔ-b: criticize
- f-s-k: beast
- k-l-d: agree
- z-l-n: comfort, solace
- ʔ-ś-þ: light, color
- y-d-ś: compare, similar, metaphor
- s-f-l: dear
- w-d-r: equal, same
- ħ-g-r: different
- m-g-þ: assign
- k-b-ć: shield, fortress
- k-z-r: hand over
- c-b-s: show, exhibit
- ħ-r-x: open
- þ-k-s: good, great
- ħ-n-b: use
- s-n-l: help
- f-þ-ʔ: proud
- s-f-n: bold
- x-r-r: young
- x-l-n: eternity
- l-n: come
- l-r-y: wait
- n-m-y: fall
- k-z-n: stop, settle
- ś-n-ħ: near
- ħ-t-r: swim
- ś-r-g: develop, evolve
- r-x-m: dwell
- ć-h-k: cold
- d-ħ-s: strong
- t-k: to sit on
- s-b-d: form, become
- ŋ-z-ʔ: pure
- d-ŋ-n: lowly, debased, humiliate
- ŋ-þ-ħ: stretch, deform
- r-ŋ-b: precious
- b-ħ-d: round
- z-n: grasp
Todo
Lakovic should be huge
Urheimat: Talma
Language with dissimilated reduplicated plurals/verbs
some confusion between derivational affixes and trigger/applicatives in Ashanic
an ergative Lakovic language
a Txapoallian Lakovic language with a possessed classifier system
Phylogeny
Proto-Lakovic
- Ashanic
- Tseeric
- Häskä
- Pfiunic
- Tumhanic
- Eta-Lakovic
- Txapoallian Lakovic
- Ejective-y, tonal language
- Tsrovesh
Phonology
The reconstructed phonology of PLak
Consonants
Labial | Dental | Domed | Palatal | Velar | Laryngeal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | ŋ /ŋ/ | ||||
Plosive | voiced | b /b/ | d /d/ | g /ɡ/ | |||
voiceless | p /p/ | t /t/ | k /k/ | Q | |||
Affricate | c /t͡s/ | ć /t͡ʂ/ | |||||
Fricative | f /f/ | s /s/ | ś /ʂ/ | š /ʃ/ | X, H | ||
Resonant | w /w/ | l /l/ | r /r/ | y /j/ |
Vowels
i u e o ə a
There is some disagreement about the vowel ə - it may have been /æ/ or /ə/.
Phonotactics
Dominated by CV or CVC syllables. Some prefixes and infixes resulted in CC-'s.
Proto-Lakovic morphology
Root structure
Roots consisted of a sequence of consonants plus an inherent vowel. Schwebeablaut was used, so the vowel could change places. The roots could be of the form
- biconsonantal roots alternating between CVC and CCV. Example: sep ~ spe 'to walk'
- triconsonantal roots alternating between CCVC, CVCC, and CVCVC. Example: ptsun ~ putsn ~ putsun 'to live'
- 4-consonant roots like cpalg ~ cplag 'to cry out'
Statistically, biconsonantal roots in Lakovic are somewhat more common than in Semitic; triconsonantal roots are derived from biconsonantals via root extensions.
Various prefixes, infixes and suffixes were added to derive words. Infixes can have 2 allomorphs, either as an infix or as a prefix: C<əC>CVC or C-CVC/C-CVCC.
Three-consonant roots had 3 ablaut grades, traditionally called:
- Verbal grade: CCVC
- Nominal grade: CVCC
- Long grade: CVCVC
The CVCC grade had some reflexes with either the first C assimilating into V or the second C (explain some words like muad, yar or -b, -d finals)
Weak roots
Weak roots such as *yriš 'to hear' and *sap' 'to pull' have irregularities in their allomorphs, like weak roots in Semitic. The weak consonants are y, w, H, and Q.
With week roots, either the verbal stem (e.g. yriš > riš) or the nominal stem (sap' > sap 'to pull, to drag') or both are shortened, and either drops or assimilates the weak consonant.
Nouns
Nouns were pluralized by total reduplication:
- lakof 'person' > lakof-lakof 'people'
- ptek 'flesh' > ptek-ptek 'a large quantity of flesh'
There was an honorific suffix -is/-s. The semantic shift from honorific to feminine was an areal feature of Talman Lakovic languages.
Nouns had no morphological case; genitive noun phrases were formed by concatenation.
Ashanic developed a new associative plural suffix -am, from päm 'that; those' (the -am in Modern Windermere plural pronouns łănam, ănam).
Case markers
Case markers came before the noun:
- xu = direct case
- Hit = indirect case
Pronouns
Most branches of Lakovic show evidence for the following PLak pronouns:
- *riH = I
- *bəŋ = we (dual inclusive)
- *śen = thou
- *śens = thou (hon)
- *Qin = he
- *Qins = he (hon)
PLak had no plural pronouns; it made do with associative plurals or demonstratives instead.
Possessive prefixes
Verbs and adjectives
Proto-Lakovic was a verb-heavy language: verbs contained enough information that a sentence could consist of just a verb, and context made sense of the meaning.
Verbs inflected for triggers, TAM, pluractionality, evidentiality, and gender agreement. Present-day Lakovic languages preserve these inflections to varying levels.
Gender
- wa- = honorific
TAM
- unmarked: imperfective (current state for stative)
- -H: perfective (dynamic for stative)
- various reduplifixes for other TAMs:
- precopyfix F(M)V- = iterative
- incopyfix ⟨iL⟩ = intensive, excessive
- saL- = inceptive
- frequentative (-le) = enFă-
- inchoative/inceptive (change state or cause a change of state) = osăL-
- graduative (gradually X) = tăFa-
Triggers
Triggers (giving the noun in the direct case specific semantic roles) were marked by adding infixes to the verbal grade of the root. The original trigger system usually became a set of derivational affixes in daughter languages, much like binyanim (originally marking voice) in Semitic languages.
Proto-Lakovic had eight triggers:
- agent trigger: unmarked?
- patient trigger: ⟨əp⟩
- destination trigger: ⟨əŋ⟩
- locative trigger: ⟨it⟩
- ablative/cause trigger: ⟨əm/nəm⟩
- instrument trigger: ⟨əg⟩
- benefactive trigger: ⟨əkəm⟩
- comitative trigger: ⟨əw⟩, ⟨lis⟩
In most branches (Ashanic, Tseeric, Tumhanic, Pfiunic, Häskä, Tsrovesh), the original trigger system became a set of derivational affixes. Txapoallian Lakovic reinterpreted the trigger system into a more head-marking, polysynthetic system. Only some modern Eta-Lakovic languages retain a trigger system today.
Nominalization
The most common ways to form deverbal nouns were:
- Using the nominal grade CVCC of the root
- The ⟨ay⟩ infix
- using instrument, place and agent affixes.
In some descendant languages such as Häskä, the nominal grade retained productivity as a derivational method, in fact there arose a triconsonantal root system.
Derivational morphology
Root extensions
There is much evidence that the truly basic roots were CVC~CCV roots, and CVCC~CCVC roots were derived from CVC~CCV via suffixing a third root consonant.
- ngit = to happen
- ngitw~ngtiw = new
Affixes
- ⟨-s⟩: feminine
- Source of breathy voice ablaut in Wdm.
- ⟨r⟩ prefix or infix: non-volitional or passive verbs
- Ashanic *⟨àr⟩, Wdm. ⟨ră⟩, ⟨năr/măr⟩
- ⟨ay⟩ = deverbal noun
- ⟨ang⟩ = place noun
- ⟨aH⟩ = agentive
- b- = agentive
- Wdm. pă- (not productive)
- Tseer ba-
- ha- = resultative (passive in Windermere)
- t- = causative
- Wdm. th- (not productive)
- lä- = denominal verbs
- Qu- = intensive
- Wdm. th-u-
- ya- = adjectivizer; from ya 'with'
- Wdm. yă-, Tseezh xi-, Häskä yə-
- ⟨Q⟩ = negative; the opposite or undoing of X
- not productive in Wdm
Proto-Lakovic syntax
Proto-Lakovic had flexible word order, but the most common word order was VSO.
Triggers
- spe-H Hit Qopr-is Xu riH (walk-PFV DIR height-FEM DIR 1SG) = I walked up high (neutral)
- s<əŋ>pe-H Hit riH Xu Qopris (<DEST>walk-PFV DIR 1SG DIR high) = I walked up high (emphasis on "up high")
Copular sentences
Proto-Lakovic was zero-copula (different descendants use different etymologies for the copula).
This caused some triggers to be reinterpreted as noun-deriving affixes in some daughter languages. Demonstration by contrived example, with the instrument trigger:
- p⟨ək⟩tuś Hit riH Hit Qin Xu məHokis.
- ⟨INST⟩stab IND 1SG IND 3SG.M DIR stone-F
- I stabbed him with the stone.
was reinterpreted as something like "The stone was a stabbing-instrument for me".
Vocabulary
- päm: this; that
- sey: here
- piy: there
- √bric: speak
- √Qoŋ: good
- √daQ: to get together
- Wdm to 'good'
- √blek: shine, radiate
- Wdm pleach
- √Qked: soft
- √snok: 'to separate'
- Wdm snoach: 'to learn'
- √snek: 'to bite'
- √ŋac: 'in front'
- √ŋic: 'empty'
- √yriš 'hear'
- Wdm. riș 'hear ye!'
- √Qpor 'high'
- Wdm. ăfur 'noble'
- Tseer ofør 'high'
- √mnot 'to produce, to grow, to give birth'
- *mont-is
- Wdm muad
- *mont-is
- √ptek 'to inhabit, to occupy, to be at'
- *p⟨aH⟩tek
- Wdm fteach 'body'
- *p⟨aH⟩tek
- √dmäy 'to drop, to grant'
- PAsh dàrmày 'rain'
- Wdm. trămäy
- PAsh dàrmày 'rain'
- *√ptsun 'to live'
- *ləkof = human, person
- √mdəŋ 'to struggle, to fight'
- Wdm. mătäng 'war'
- *ṛ-: nonvolitional
- Wdm -ră-, -năr-
- √tkä' 'to go'
- Proto-Ashanic àrtka < *ṛ-tkä
- Windermere răchta 'to die'
- Tseer adhka 'to go'
- Tsjoen tjo
- Proto-Ashanic àrtka < *ṛ-tkä
- ksìH
- Wdm. csie 'star'
- śkey
- Wdm. scey 'bark'
- məmə 'mother'
- Wdm. ăma
- Qeb 'father'
- Wdm. ep
- lban 'water'
- PAsh àlbon
- Wdm. blon
- Tseer olban, Modern nban
- Häskä əlfon
- PAsh àlbon
- √žän 'to say'
- PAsh šan 'to utter, to say'; šàn 'word'
- Proto-Tumhanic hjàn 'word'
- Schong jahn
- Æ jov?
- Wdm. șän
- Proto-Tumhanic hjàn 'word'
- PAsh šan 'to utter, to say'; šàn 'word'
- √lgän 'straight, upright'
- PAsh àlgan
- Wdm. glan 'straight'
- Tseer ookhan
- PAsh àlgan
- mi 'general oblique marker'; became 'in, at' in many daughter languages.
Numbers
1-6: aHdan, aHrət, atsiw, amsHək, amsHut, dək
Feminine forms for 1-5: Hadna, Hərta, tsiwa, msəHka, msuHta