Valthungian/Rules
Historical Sound Changes from Proto-Germanic to East Germanic (ca. 400b.c.-0)
It should be noted that many of these changes preceded what we think of as "Proto-Germanic" or "Common Germanic," but I include them here because they have important phonological or orthographic information, or because the same changes occurred in different ways in East Germanic and North-West Germanic.
First Umlaut
Stage 1.
e > i / V[+str] … __[-str] ! {r,h⁽ʷ⁾,+}
- /e/ > /i/ when unstressed following a stressed vowel except before /r/, /h/, /hʷ/, or a morpheme boundary.
Stage 2.
e > i / __[+str] ! {r,h⁽ʷ⁾,+}
- /e/ > /i/ when stressed except before /r/, /h/, /hʷ/, or a morpheme boundary.
(Stage 3: See EGmc Reflex of 1st Umlaut.)
Has to precede Mora Loss
Has to precede ŋ-deletion
/ŋ/-Deletion
Vŋh > V[+lng, +nas]Øh
- A vowel, followed by the sequence /ŋh/ (where /h/=[h,x]), becomes long and nasal and /ŋ/ is deleted (in all environments).
Intervocalic Spirantization
C[+vce,-cnt] > [+cnt] / V__V
In other words,
b,d,g > β,ð,γ / V__V
- A voiced non-continuant consonant (i.e. a voiced stop) becomes continuant (i.e. a fricative) when intervocalic.
EGmc Reflex of 1st Umlaut
This rule is really "Stage 3" of First Umlaut, also called East Germanic Expansion of First Umlaut
i,u > e,o / __[+str]{r,h⁽ʷ⁾}
- /i/ becomes /e/ and /u/ becomes /o/ when stressed before /r/, /h/, or /hʷ/
Monophthongization of Unstressed /ai, au/
ai,au > ɛ̄,ɔ̄ / σ[-str]__[-str]Co#
- Has to precede Mora Loss
Mora Loss
Mora Loss consists of three contemporaneous changes to unstressed word-final syllables: The deletion of non-strident coronal consonants, the deletion of short vowels, and the shortening of long vowels.
Coronal Consonant Deletion
C[+obs][+cor][-sdt] > Ø / V[-str]Co__##
- A non-strident coronal obstruent (i.e. /t, þ, d/, but not /s, z/) is deleted after an unstressed vowel when word-final. (One or more consonants - probably sonorants - may intervene between the unstressed vowel and the word-final consonant.)
E.g.
- ‘ten’, ‘honey’, ‘from behind’
- PIE *déḱm̥t, *mélit, *h₂epóteroṓd >
- PGmc *téhund, *míliþ, *áfterôt >
- EGmc *téhun_, *míli_, *áfterô_ >
- Gothic taihun[1], *mili, aftarō >
- Valthungian tǣjun, mile, aftra
Unstressed Final Short Vowel Deletion
V[-lng][-str]([-rnd] for a. and c.) > Ø / | a) σ(V[+lng]{V, C})C__(z)# |
b) V[-str]C__(z)# | |
c) C[-rnd]# |
- a) An unstressed unrounded short vowel (i.e. /a, e, i/) is deleted if following a stressed syllable (containing a long diphthong or a long vowel followed by a consonant) when word-final or before word-final /z/.
- b) An unstressed short vowel (i.e. /a, e, i, u/) is deleted after an unstressed syllable when word-final or before word-final /z/.
- c) (Later), unstressed /a, e, i/ is deleted when word-final.
E.g.
- ‘fear’, ‘I have seen’ (> ‘I know’), ‘day’; ‘son’
- PIE *ā́gʰes, *wóido, *dʰegʷʰos; *suHnús >
- PGmc *ṓgiz, *waita, *dagaz; *sunuz >
- EGmc *ōg_z, *wait_, *dag_z; *sunuz >
- Gothic ōgs, wait[2], dags, but sunus >
- Valthungian ōǧ (/auʤ/), wǣt, daǧ; sunus.
Final Unstressed Long Vowel Shortening
V[+lng][-str] > [-lng] / __#
- Unstressed long vowels are shortened when word-final.
- NB: At this stage of the language, there was no short /o/; when /ō/ was shortened in East Germanic, it was lowered to /a/. (In North and West Germanic, /ō/ was raised to /u/.)
E.g.
Historical Sound Changes from East-Germanic to Gothic (ca. 0-400a.d.)
[these changes still need to be ordered correctly]
z-Deletion, Obstruent Devoicing
z → ∅ / V[-lng]{r,s}___#
- /z/ is deleted word-finally after a short vowel followed by /r/ or /s/.
E.g.:
- ‘man’, ‘fall’, ‘shoulder’
- PGmc *weraz, *drusaz, *amsaz >
- Egmc *wirz, *drusz, *amsz >
- Gothic waír, drus, ams
h-Deletion
Long Vowel Lowering
Glide Gemination (EGmc Verschärfung Stage I)
Glide Insertion
m-Assimilation
Change of Initial fl to þl
r,n-Dissimilation
Change of am to um, Post-tonic e to a
Thurneysen's Law
EGmc Verschärfung Stage II
Historical Sound Changes from Gothic to Old Valthungian (ca. 400-800a.d.)
Expansion of Gothic Glide Insertion
This is a slightly altered continuation of the earlier East Germanic Glide Insertion rule; the rule remains persistent throughout Valthungian grammar.
∅ | → | j | / | V | ___ | + | V | ||
-bck | |||||||||
-low | |||||||||
∅ | → | w | / | V | ___ | + | V | ||
+bck | |||||||||
-low |
- /j/ is inserted between two vowels, the first of which is a non-low front vowel (e,ē,i,ī).
- /w/ is inserted between two vowels, the first of which is a non-low back vowel (o,ō,u,ū).
- E.g.
- ija ‘her’ + Short Vowel Lengthening → /īa/ + Glide Insertion Exp → īja → (ev.) /aija/ īja
- rauan /rɔ̄an/ ‘to row’ + Stressed Long Vowel Raising → /rōan/ + Glide Insertion Exp → /rōwan/ (ev.) /rōn/ rǭn
Obstruent Devoicing (Persistent)
C | → | [-vox] | / | ___ | { -vox | ||
+vox | {# | ||||||
+obs | |||||||
+cnt |
- A voiced continuant obstruent (/v/, /ð/, or /z/) becomes unvoiced (/f/, /þ/, or /s/, respectively) before another unvoiced consonant or when word-final.
- This is a persistent rule inherited from Proto-Germanic, and remains persistent throughout the transition to Classical Valthungian.
- E.g. wivna ‘to weave’ has preterite wōf ‘wove’
Geminate Simplification (Type I, Persistent)
CC | → | C | / | ___ | { C | or | C } | ___ |
{ # | # } |
- Geminates become simplified when adjacent to another consonant or when word-initial or -final.
- (Not that geminates are likely to occur word-initially; usually this occurs as the result of vowel deletion.)
- This is a persistent rule inherited from Proto-Germanic. It remains persistent until it is changed in Geminiate Simplification II and then vanishes, as all geminates have been deleted from the language.
- E.g.
- swamm ‘swam’, past of swimman ‘to swim’, → swam, but switman.
- kunnan ‘can’ has past of kunþa ‘could’ → kutnan, kunþa.