Talsmic languages

Themsármai: Gávthir tálsmymir

The Talsmic languages are a relatively isolated subbranch of the Zachydic language family; with Raxic they form the Raxo-Talsmic subfamily. They are descended from Proto-Talsmic (PT or PTal).

Characteristics

The historical Talsmic languages have all shared the following characteristics to some extent:

  • lack of inflectional case
  • rigidly head-initial word order
    • verb-initial clauses
  • heavy grammatical use of pronominal suffixes/enclitics on possessed nouns, verbs and prepositions, that index their dependents
    • some languages use bare possessum forms.
  • differential indexing of the direct object and the possessor, and occasionally the prepositional object
  • grammatical apophony (tonal, vocalic or consonantal)
  • word order changes for topicalization and focusing
  • prominence of tense rather than aspect in verbal TAM, unlike in mainland Zachydic languages.

Characteristic phylogenetic innovations vis-à-vis Zachydic include:

  • Loss of final vowels/case endings.
  • Rhotacization of /*z/ to /*r/ V_V, and secondary rhotacization (often before consonants, the choice of which depends on the language).
  • Development of Proto-Zachydic ejective stops into aspirated stops, which often fricativize in daughter languages.
  • Assibilation of affricates occuring after primary rhotacization (/*cʼ, *c/ > /*s/, /*ʒ/ > /*z/ etc.) greatly reduces the consonant inventory; this also contributes to the fricative-rich flavor of Talsmic.
  • Also common is the transition of the uvular series into the radical series; uvulars are still found in some phonetically conservative languages and dialects, however.

Proto-Talsmic phonology

The following is the Proto-Talsmic sound system as reconstructed by Talsmicist Dàžiir pyr Chlìesa.

Consonant inventory

Proto-Talsmic reconstructed consonants
Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal *m *n
Plosive voiceless *p *t *c *k *q
voiced *b *d *g
aspirated *pʰ *tʰ *cʰ *kʰ *qʰ
Fricative voiceless *s *h
voiced *z
Approximant *w *j
Trill *r
Lateral app. *l

/qʰ/ may have been realized as an affricate, [qχ].

Vocalic inventory

Front Central Back
Close *i *ī *u *ū
Mid *e *ē *o *ō
Open *a *ā

Phonotactics

The maximal syllable structure was CCGVCC, where G was a glide.

CC- could be comprised of:

  • [not glide][liquid/glide]
  • [voiceless obstruent][voiceless obstruent]
  • [voiced obstruent][voiced obstruent]

-CC could maximally be sonorant + obstruent or obstruent + obstruent. -CC was only permitted word-finally.

Proto-Talsmic grammar

Nominal morphology

Nouns and adjectives had retained from Proto-Zachydic 6 cases (nominative, accusative, genitive/prepositional, allative, ablative, locative/instrumental), 3 numbers, 2 genders (masculine, feminine), and additionally possessive inflection for nouns. Like its daughter languages as well as Proto-Zachydic, Common Talsmic is thought to have been a differential object marking language; only definite or specific direct objects were marked with the accusative case.

[Genitive is partitive > indefinite?]

Declension
*çúma=ʔ 'air' *méisar 'segment'
Gender → Masculine Feminine
Case ↓ Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
Nominative *çúma *çúmōr *çúmūç *méisar *méisoir *méisāne
Accusative *çúmeç *çúmōç *çúmūt *méisaç *méisoiç *méisina
Genitive/Prepositional *çúmu *çúmār *çúmakʰe *méiset *méisair *méis(in)ir
Ablative
Allative ? ?
Instrumental/Locative *çúmīl *méisai

The essive case (*-ēr) was marginal, and was only used adverbially (cf. Th. -ēr adverbial suffix).

Some nouns took the "thematic" suffix/clitic *-ʔ with an uncertain meaning, a holdover from the classifier system in Proto-Zachydic.

Pronominal morphology

Proto-Talsmic free pronouns can be reconstructed with less confidence because all case marking except as clitics and suffixes was eliminated.

Full personal pronouns

Possessive suffixes

Verbal morphology

Thematic suffixes

Proto-Talsmic saw the development of thematic vowels from derivational suffixes. Thematic vowels are found in many Talsmic languages, but modern languages often generalize the a-paradigm to the expense of the others.

  • *-īn: basic verbs
  • *-a-īn: denominative or transitive verbs
  • *-e-īn: dynamic or reflexive verbs

TAM/subject affix paradigm

Other verbal affixes

Other reconstructible affixes include:

  • the memory evidential prefix *ʔṇʔ-.
  • -va-, passive suffix.

Syntax

Basic word order was most likely SVO.

Sound changes to Proto-Talsmic

  • *wj
    • > *j / #_
    • > *w / otherwise
  • /ř/ > */r/ _V, */l/ otherwise
  • /*ɢ/ > /*ʁ/
  • C[+ejective]
    • > C[+aspirated] (the pathway may have been /*kʼ/ > /*kˀ/ > /*kʡ/ > /*kᴴ/ > /*kʰ/)
    • > C[-aspirated] / _C
    • > /*ʔ/ / _#
  • C[-ejective]
    • > C[-aspirated]
    • > C[+aspirated] / _C
  • /*z/ > /*r/ / V_V, V_#
  • /*c *ʒ *cʰ/ > /*s *z *s/, /*cc *ʒʒ *ccʰ/ > /*ts *dz *ts/
  • /*nr/ > /*mr/

Sound changes from Proto-Talsmic

Talsmic consonant correspondences
PTal HThm LThm Tiz Sn Qel
*m m /m/ /m/ /m/ /m/
*p p /p/, /b/ /p/
*b b /b/ /b/
*pʰ f /h/ /p/
*n n /n/ /n/
*t t /t/, /d/ /t/
*d d /j/ /d/
*tʰ th /f/ /ħ/ /t/
*s s /s~ʃ/ /s/
*z z, r /z~ʒ/, /ɾ/ /z/
th, f /f/ /ʃ/, /tʃʰ/ /ʃ/ /h/
ð, f /v/ /ʒ/, /dʒʱ/ /ʒ/ /j/
*c ŧ /ts~tʃ/ /tʃ/, /tʃʰ/ /tʃ/ /ts/
ł /j/ /j/, /ɧ/ /dʒ/ /dz/
*k c, ch /k/, /g/, /tʃ/, /ʒ/ /k/, /kʰ/ /k/
*g g, ch /g/, /ʒ/, /w/ /g/, /gʱ/ /g/
*kʰ ch, c /x/, /ʃ/ /x/, /kxʰ/ /k/
*q q, ħ /ɴ/, /h/ /ʡ/, /ʡʰ/ /ŋ~ɴ/ /q/
ħ, v /h/, /w/ /w/, /ʍ/ /ʁ/ /ʁ/
*qʰ ħ /h/ /ʕ/, /ħ/ /ʕ/, /ħ/ /χ/
*l l /l/ /l/
*r r /ɾ/ /r/
*w v /v/ /b/, /w/
*j ı /j/ /j/
*h h /h/ /h/
Ø Ø Ø

to Tizian

  • /w/ > /v/
  • /ʁ/
    • > /w/ _C[-velar],
    • > /ʕ/ otherwise
  • /n/ > /ː/ _C[-glide]
  • /l/ > /r/ _C[-glide]
  • /z/ > /r/ / _C[+voiced, not /z/]
  • /sŧ, šŧ/ > /št/
  • Stress accent develops from initial stress.
  • /aː/ > /o/
  • /eː oː/ > /e˞ o˞/ <ee oo>
  • /iː uː ʉː/ > /iɚ uɚ ʉɚ/ medially.
  • /ai ei/ > /ei i/
  • /ç ʝ/
    • > /ʃ ʒ/
  • /p t ŧ k b d g/ > /pʰ tʰ ŧʰ kʰ bʰ dʰ gʰ/
    • _V[+high tone]
    • _C[+fricative]#