Pulqer/History
< Pulqer
- Analogical levelling of irregular forms or substitution by diminutives etc, e.g. auris > auricula > oricla.
Vulgar Latin Changes
The following changes were underway already in Vulgar Latin when it reached Jacques in 3rd century:
- Syncope of unstressed vowels adjacent to glides, e.g. solidus > soldus.
- Change of prevocalic /e, i/ > /j/, e.g. filia > filja.
- Merger of /b, w/ as allophonic /b ~ β/, e.g. vivo > bibo.
- Loss of h, e.g. hominem > ominem.
- Loss of final consonants, e.g. mūrum > mūru.
- Assimilation of ns > s with compensatory lengthening, e.g. mensa > mēsa > mesa
- Loss of vowel quantity
- Palatalisation of all consonants before /j/, e.g. ratione > ratsjone
- Palatalisation of c, g before i, e.g. cippus > tsippu
Old Pulqer Changes
A number of fundamental changes between Latin and Old Pulqer are believed to have happened almost immediately as a result of Kelt speakers learning Latin imperfectly.
- High mid vowels (/e, o/ merge with high vowels, e.g. mesa > misa
- Chain shift in which voiced plosives become unaspirated voiceless plosives and voiceless plosives become aspirated voiceless plosives, e.g. cadere > khatere
- b ~ β > p > ph (except βC > uc
- d > t > th
- g > k > kh
- qu > qh
- Assimilation of consonant clusters, e.g. octō > uttu
- mn > nn
- ct > tt
- x /ks/ > ss
- Prothesis before word-initial r- or sC-, e.g. rẹge > arieke, stella > astella
The following are later developments within OP.
- Stressed open vowels are lengthened, e.g. car'tate > kharttaette
- a > ae
- e > ei
- i > ie
- u > ue
- All other unstressed vowels lost, wherever possible, e.g. omine > unne
- Syllabic liquids ḷ, ṛ develop between other consonants, e.g. sacramentum > sakhṛmentu
rota > rauta otto > attu aurum > aarum >