Niemish
Nimsk
Pronunciation[/nʲimsk/]
Created byUser:Tardigrade
Date2015
Official status
Official language in
Niemgard
Language codes
ISO 639-3qnm
BRCLgrey
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Niemish (Nimsk) is an East Germanic language descended from Wulfilan Gothic, the oldest Germanic language with a sizeable text corpus. The name originated from Proto-Slavic *němĭcĭ, an exonym given by speakers of Slavic languages to Germanic speakers. Niemish has undergone extensive influence by Slavic languages and is a member of the Balkan sprachbund, having such features as suffixed definite articles and deriving the future tense from present subjunctive. There is also considerable influence from languages such as Turkish, Hungarian, Greek, Latin and Romance languages.

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Denti-alveolar Postalveolar Velar Glottal
hard soft hard (Dental) soft (Alveolar) neutral soft hard neutral
Nasal m ⟨m⟩ mʲ ⟨mj⟩ ⟨n⟩ ⟨nj⟩ ŋʲ ⟨ngj⟩ ŋ ⟨ng⟩
Plosive voiceless p ⟨p⟩ pʲ ⟨pj⟩ ⟨t⟩ ⟨tj⟩ kʲ ⟨kj⟩ k ⟨k⟩
voiced b ⟨b⟩ bʲ ⟨bj⟩ ⟨d⟩ ⟨dj⟩ ɡʲ ⟨gj⟩ ɡ ⟨g⟩
Affricate voiceless ʦ̪ ⟨tz⟩ ʦʲ ⟨tzj⟩ ʧ ⟨cz⟩
voiced ʣ̪ ⟨dz⟩ ʣʲ ⟨dzj⟩ ʤ ⟨dsz⟩
Spirant voiceless f ⟨f⟩ fʲ ⟨fj⟩ ⟨s⟩ ⟨sj⟩ ʃ ⟨sz⟩ xʲ ⟨chj⟩ x ⟨ch⟩ h ⟨h⟩
voiced v ⟨v⟩ vʲ ⟨wj, vj⟩ ⟨z⟩ ⟨zj⟩ ʒ ⟨zsz⟩
Approximant w ⟨w⟩ ɫ̪ ⟨l⟩ ⟨lj⟩ j ⟨j⟩
Trill ⟨r⟩ rʲ ⟨rj⟩

Vowels

Vowels in stressed syllables
Front Central Back
Long Short Long Short Short Long
Close /iː/ ⟨í⟩ /ɪ/ ⟨ì⟩ /ɨː/ ⟨ý⟩ /ʊ/ ⟨ù⟩ /uː/ ⟨ú⟩
Mid /eː/ ⟨é⟩ /ɛ/
⟨è, ä̀⟩
/ə/ ⟨ỳ⟩ /ɔ/ ⟨ò⟩ /oː/ ⟨ó⟩
/ɛː/ ⟨ä́⟩
Open /aː/ ⟨á⟩ /a/ ⟨à⟩

⟨a, ä, o, u, y⟩ occur after plain consonants and ⟨e, i⟩ occur after palatalised.

The acute and grave accents are often used in dictionaries and pedagogical material to mark stressed long vowels and stressed short vowels respectively, but they are not usually used in other situations. This does not usually present problems, as:

  • most (but not quite all) words in Niemish are stressed on the first syllable of the root
  • long vowels can only occur in open syllables and short vowels in closed syllables or open syllables followed by a voiceless plosive

So stressed vowels and their length can be predicted with a high degree of accuracy. See here for notable exceptions.

Other than /ɛː/ open vowels are short while close vowels are long or occur in diphthongs. In most dialects /ɛː/ has merged with /eː/, making the distinction between ⟨é⟩ and ⟨ä́⟩ purely a matter of whether or not the preceding consonant is palatalised.

The diphthongs in Niemish are all falling, ending on /j/, /w/ or a liquid consonant /l, lʲ, m, mʲ, n, nʲ, r, rʲ/:

Initial
segment
Final segment
/_j/ /_w/ liquid consonant
using /r/ as example
/a/ ⟨aj⟩ ⟨aw⟩ ⟨ar⟩
/ɛ/ ⟨äj⟩ ⟨äw⟩ ⟨är⟩
/e/ ⟨ej⟩ ⟨ew⟩ ⟨er⟩
/i/ ⟨ij⟩[1] ⟨iw⟩ ⟨ir⟩
/ɨ/ ⟨yw⟩ ⟨yr⟩
/o/ ⟨oj⟩ ⟨ow⟩ ⟨or⟩
/u/ ⟨uj⟩ ⟨uw⟩[1] ⟨ur⟩

The realisation of ⟨y⟩ varies considerably by dialect; many, including the Capitoline dialect, simply merge it with ⟨i⟩, making the distinction between ⟨y⟩ and ⟨i⟩ purely a matter of whether or not the preceding consonant is palatalised. Other possible realisations include:

  • [ɪ̈] or [ɨ] for the short ⟨y⟩
  • [ɤ, ɯː]
  • [ɘ, eː]

The stressed vowels are represented in Niemish orthography thus:

Vowel Niemish orthography
After a plain consonant
using /b/ as example
After a palatalised consonant
using /bʲ/ as example
After a postalveolar consonant
using /j/ as example
After /h/ Word-initially
/a, aː/ ⟨ba⟩ ⟨bia⟩ ⟨ja⟩ ⟨ha⟩ ⟨a⟩
/ɛ, ɛː/ ⟨bä⟩ ⟨biä⟩ ⟨jä⟩ ⟨hä⟩ ⟨ä⟩
/ɛ, eː/ ⟨be⟩ ⟨je⟩ ⟨hä⟩ ⟨e⟩
/ə, ɨː/ ⟨by⟩ ⟨jy⟩ ⟨hy⟩
/ɪ, iː/ ⟨bi⟩ ⟨hi⟩ ⟨i⟩
/ɔ, oː/ ⟨bo⟩ ⟨bio⟩ ⟨jo⟩ ⟨ho⟩ ⟨o⟩
/ʊ, uː/ ⟨bu⟩ ⟨biu⟩ ⟨ju⟩ ⟨hu⟩ ⟨u⟩
Vowels in unstressed syllables
Front Central Back
Close /ɪ/ ⟨i, e¹⟩ /ə/ ⟨y, e²⟩ /ʊ/ ⟨u, o⟩
Mid
Open /ɐ/ ⟨a⟩
  1. Unstressed ⟨e⟩ when not absolutely final, e.g. ⟨gomen⟩ /ˈgoːmʲɪn/
  2. Unstressed ⟨e⟩ when absolutely final, e.g. ⟨grune⟩ /ˈgruːnʲə/

A sequence of a hard consonant followed by a front vowel is realised with a velar offglide inserted (or a labiovelar offglide after labial consonants):

  • dächs /dɛːxs/ [dɰɛːxs], dialectally [dɰeːxs]
  • bärs /bɛrs/ [bwɛrs], dialectally [bwers]

This also holds in dialects where /ə, ɨː/ have merged with /ɪ, i/ or [ɘ, eː]ː

  • kyna /ˈkɨːnɐ/ Standard: [ˈkɨːnɐ], Dialectal: [ˈkɰiːnɐ], [ˈkɰeːnɐ]
  • ęfynund /ɪ̃ˈfɨːnʊnd/ Standard: [ɪ̃ˈfɨːnʊnd], Dialectal: [ɪ̃ˈfwiːnʊnd], [ɪ̃ˈfweːnʊnd]

Glide insertion is not phonemic and thus not indicated in most IPA transcriptions.

Scripts

Alphabet

The Niemish alphabet consists of 33 letters.

Majuscule Minuscule IPA
A a /a, aː/
Ą ą /ã, ãː/
Ä ä /ɛ~ɛː/
Ą̈ ą̈ /ɛ̃, ɛ̃ː/
B b /b, bʲ/
C c /k, ʦʲ/
D d /d, dʲ/
E e /ɛ, eː/
Ę ę /ɛ̃, ẽː/
F f /f, fʲ/
G g /g, gʲ/
Majuscule Minuscule IPA
H h /h/
I i /ɪ, iː/
Į į /ɪ̃, ĩː/
J j /j/
K k /k, kʲ/
L l /l, lʲ/
M m /m, mʲ/
N n /n, nʲ/
O o /ɔ, oː/
Ǫ ǫ /ɔ̃, õː/
P p /p, pʲ/
Majuscule Minuscule IPA
(Q) (q) /k, kʲ/
R r /r, rʲ/
S s /s, sʲ/
T t /t, tʲ/
U u /ʊ, uː/
Ų ų /ʊ̃, ũ/
(V) (v) /v, vʲ/
W w /w, vʲ/
X x /ks, kʲsʲ/
Y y /ə, ɨː/
Z z /z, zʲ/

The acute and grave accent can respectively mark stressed long vowels (or diphthongs) and stressed short vowels. These are generally not used except in dictionaries for clarity.

In addition, Niemish orthography uses six digraphs: ⟨Ch, Cz, Ph, Sz, Th, Tz⟩ and two trigraphs:⟨Dsz, Zsz⟩ These function as sequences of two or three letters for collation purposes.

Outside digraphs, the letters ⟨C, Q, V⟩ only appear in loanwords, as do the digraphs ⟨Ph, Th⟩ and the trigraph ⟨Dsz⟩.

Orthography

Cyrillic script

Letter Numerical
value
Niemish
Latin
equivalent
Phoneme Name Name in
Latin letters
А а 1 A a /a, aː/
Б б B b /b, bʲ/
В в 2 W w, V v /w, vʲ/
Г г 3 G g /ɡ/
Д д 4 D d /d/
Є є, Е e[2] 5 E e /e, ʲe/
Ж ж Zsz zsz /ʒ/
Ѕ ѕ 6 Dz dz /ʣ/
З з 7 Z z /z/
И и 8 I i /i/
Ѳ ѳ 9 Tz tz /ʦ/
І і[3] 10 I i /i/
К к 20 K k /k/
Л л 30 L l /l/
М м 40 M m /m/
Н н 50 N n /n/
Ѻ ѻ, О o[2] 70 O o /o/
П п 80 P p /p/
Р р 100 R r /r/
С с 200 S s /s/
Т т 300 T t /t/
ОУ оу[2] 400 U u /u/
Ф ф 500 F f /f/
Х х 600 Ch ch /x/
Ѡ ѡ[4] 800 O o /o/
Щ щ St st /st/
Ц ц 900 Tz tz /ʦ/
Ч ч 90 Cz cz /ʧ/
Ш ш Sz sz /ʃ/
Ъ ъ
Ꙑ ꙑ Y y /ɨ/
Ь ь J j /ʲ/
Ѣ ѣ ä /ɛ/
Ꙓ ꙓ Jä jä, iä /jɛ, , ʲɛ/
Ю ю Jo jo, io /jo, ʲo/
ЮУ юу Ju ju, iu /ju, ʲu/
Ꙗ ꙗ Ja ja, ia /ja, ʲa/
Ѥ ѥ Je je, ie /je, ʲe/
Ꙙ ꙙ Ą ą /ã, ʲã/
Ꙝ ꙝ Ją ją, ią /jã, ʲã/
Ѧ ѧ Ę ę /ẽ, ʲẽ/
Ѩ ѩ Ję, ję /jẽ/
Ꙟ ꙟ Į į /ĩ, ʲĩ/
Ѫ ѫ Ǫ ǫ /õ/
Ѭ ѭ Jǫ jǫ, iǫ /jõ, ʲõ/
ѪУ ѫу Ų ų /ũ/
ѬУ ѭу Jų jų, ių /jũ, ʲũ/
Ѯ ѯ[5] 60 Ks ks /ks/
Ѱ ѱ[5] 700 Ps ps /ps/
Ѵ ѵ[5] 400 I i /i/

Pronouns

Nominative Accusative Genitive Dative
1st sg. i mi mi(n)[6] mes
2nd sg. tzu tzu(n)[6] tzos
3rd sg. masc. na/en es em
3rd sg. fem. ja/ej zas ze
3rd refl. si si(n)[6] ses
1st pl. wys ųs ǫr ǫs
2st pl. jus zar zes
3rd pl. masc. is ze ę
3rd pl. fem. jas za

The use of na and ja or en and ej is phonotactically motivated, not grammatically: na and ja appear before their associated verb while en and ej appear after. Consequently na and ja most often have a nominative sense, while en and ej most often have an accusative one. Note however that in verb-first constructions, such as ist en? "is he?" en and ej are used with a nominative sense.

Nouns and adjectives

Nouns

Niemish nouns are inflected for three cases (nominative-accusative, genitive and dative) and two numbers (singular and plural). In addition, definite nouns are marked with a suffix that evolved out of postposed Gothic definite articles, functionally giving every noun two declensions for singular and plural.

All nouns belong to one of two genders: masculine and feminine. The neuter gender of medieval Niemish has fallen together with masculine except in the Westlandic dialect, although the neuter plural still survives as an irregular plural for some formerly neuter nouns and has even become generalised to mark the plural of masculine nouns that commonly occur as a group, especially in pairs, often in parallel with a regular plural with a less specialised sense.

There are three classes of masculine noun:

  • hard stem (may be subject to umlaut) wich
  • soft stem kunnj
  • mixed (may be subject to umlaut in the singular) sun

There are four classes of feminine noun:

In addition, nouns with polysyllabic stems may be subject to syncopation, although this does not affect the class into which they are sorted.

Masculine nouns

Hard stem nouns

Case monosyllabic stem
hub "hoof"
polysyllabic stem
iszar "iron"
syncopating polysyllabic stem
latur "laughter"
singular plural singular plural singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative hub huban hubs hubas iszar iszaran iszars iszaras latur latran laturs latras
genitive hubs hubes hube hubse iszars iszares iszare iszarse laturs latres latre laturse
dative hub hubum hubą hubę iszar iszarum iszarą iszarę latur latrum latrą latrę
Case monosyllabic stem
wich "way", "road"
polysyllabic stem
ziuluf "forelock", "ringlet"
syncopating polysyllabic stem
gumin "husband"
singular plural singular plural singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative wich wechan wechs wechas ziuluf ziulofan ziulofs ziulofas gumin gomnan gomens gomnas
genitive wichs wiches wiche wichse ziulufs ziulufes ziulufe ziulufse gumins gumnes gumne guminse
dative wech wechum wechą wechę ziulof ziulofum ziulofą ziulofę gomen gomnum gomną gomnę
Case monosyllabic stem
liab "bread"
polysyllabic stem
syncopating polysyllabic stem
wintur "winter"
singular plural singular plural singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative liab liaban liabs liabas wíntur wéntran wéntors wéntras
genitive liäbs liäbes liäbe liäbse wínturs wíntres wíntre wínturse
dative liab liabum liabą liabę wéntor wéntrum wéntrą wéntrę

Soft stem nouns

Case kunnj "kin", "tribe", "ethnicity"
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative kunnj kunnian kunns kunnias
genitive kunns kunnes kunne kunnse
dative kunnj kunnium kunnią kunnę

Mixed stem nouns

Case aszul "donkey", "ass"
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative aszol aszlan äszuls äszlias
genitive äszuls äszles äszle äszulse
dative aszol aszlum äszlią äszlę

Feminine nouns

Case blum "flower"
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative blum bluma blums blumas
genitive blums blumas bluma blumsa
dative blume blumse blumą blumę
Case sullj "sole", "footprint"
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative sullj sullia sulls sullias
genitive sulls sullias sullia sullsa
dative sulle sullse sullią sullę
Case simple stem
trega "grief"
syncopating stems
uggla "owl", klezma "bell"
singular plural singular plural singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative trega tregna tregas tregnas uggla uggulna ugglas uggulnas klezma klezmyna klezmas klezmynas
genitive tregas tregnas tregna tregsa ugglas uggulnas uggulna uggulsa klezmas klezmynas klezmyna klezmysa
dative tregą tregse tregę tregnę ugglą uggulse ugglę uggulnę klezmą klezmyse klezmę klezmynę
Case simple stem
snuria "plait", "braid"
syncopating stem
singular plural singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative snuria snurna snurias snurnas -ia -na -ias -as
genitive snurias snurnas snurna snursa -ias -as -na -sa
dative snurią snurse snurę snurnę -ią -se -nę
Case simple stem
szuke "disease"
syncopating stem
singular plural singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative szuke szukna szukes szuknas -e -na -es -as
genitive szukes szuknas szukna szuksa -es -as -na -sa
dative szukę szukse szukę szuknę -se -nę

Adjectives

Adjectives have been radically simplified since Gothic. All adjectives have hard stems and inflectional endings are retained only in predicative plural.

.Attributive adjectives are only marked for gender, case, number and definiteness insofar as these distinctions are marked by umlaut alternations, so attributive feminine adjectives are indeclinable. Predicative adjectives are inflected for number but not gender.

Case masculine feminine
singular plural singular plural
indefinite definite
Nominative blind blend blend
Genitive blind
Dative blend
Predicative blends blends

Nominalised adjectives decline as masculine hard stem nouns:

Verbs

The Gothic subjunctive mood has been repurposed into two set of dependent verb forms (perfective and imperfective); these cannot occur without subordinating prefix i.

Aspect Non-past Past Imperative
Imperfective Present Imperfect
('I break') ('I was breaking') ('be breaking!')
1 sg. brek brak brik
2 sg. briks brakt
3 sg. brikt brak
1 pl. breką braką brikt
2 pl. brikt brakt
3 pl. breką braką
Perfective Past Imperative
('I broke') ('break!')
1 sg. gybrak gybrik
2 sg. gybrakt
3 sg. gybrak
1 pl. gybraką gybrikt
2 pl. gybrakt
3 pl. gybraką
Perfect Present Perfect Past Perfect
('I have broken') ('I had broken')
1 sg. hab gybrokyn had gybrokyn
2 sg. has gybrokyn hads gybrokyn
3 sg. hat gybrokyn had gybrokyn
1 pl. ham gybrokyn hadą gybrokyn
2 pl. hat gybrokyn hadt gybrokyn
3 pl. han gybrokyn hadą gybrokyn
Imperfective
Dependent
Present
perfective dependent
Past
perfective dependent
1 sg. breka brikkia
2 sg. brekes brikes
3 sg. breke brikkj
1 pl. brekem brikem
2 pl. breket briket
3 pl. breken briken
Perfective
Dependent
Present
perfective dependent
Past
perfective dependent
1 sg. gybreka gybrikkia
2 sg. gybrekes gybrikes
3 sg. gybreke gybrikkj
1 pl. gybrekem gybrikem
2 pl. gybreket gybriket
3 pl. gybreken gybriken
With subordinating preposition i With future construction williund i
Present Past Present Past
Imperfective i na breke '(that) he be breaking', 'to be breaking' i na brikkj '(that) he was breaking, 'to have been breaking' na willt i breke 'he will be breaking' na willt i brikkj 'he would break'
Perfective i na gybreke '(that) he break', 'to break' i na gybrikkj '(that) he broke', 'to have broken' i na gybreke 'he will break' i na gybrikkj 'he probably broke'
Aspect Non-past Past Imperative
Imperfective Present Imperfect
('I have') ('I was having') ('be having!')
1 sg. hab had hab
2 sg. habs has hadt
3 sg. habt hat had
1 pl. habą ham hadą habt
2 pl. habt hat hadt
3 pl. habą han hadą
Perfective Past Imperative
('I had') ('have!')
1 sg. gyhad gyhab
2 sg. gyhadt
3 sg. gyhad
1 pl. gybraką gyhabt
2 pl. gyhadt
3 pl. gyhadą
Perfect Present Perfect Past Perfect
('I have had') ('I had had')
1 sg. hab gyhabt had gyhabt
2 sg. häs gyhabt hads gyhabt
3 sg. hät gyhabt had gyhabt
1 pl. ham gyhabt hadą gyhabt
2 pl. hät gyhabt hadt gyhabt
3 pl. han gyhabt hadą gyhabt
Imperfective
Dependent
Present
perfective dependent
Past
perfective dependent
1 sg. haba haza
2 sg. habes hades
3 sg. habe haz
1 pl. habem hadem
2 pl. habet hadet
3 pl. haben haden
Perfective
Dependent
Present
perfective dependent
Past
perfective dependent
1 sg. gyhaba gyhaza
2 sg. gyhabes gyhades
3 sg. -chabe gyhaz
1 pl. gyhabem gyhadem
2 pl. gyhabet gyhadet
3 pl. gyhaben gyhaden
With subordinating prefix e- With future prefix we-
Present Past Present Past
Imperfective i na habe '(that) he be having', 'to be having' i na haz '(that) he was having, 'to have been having' na willt i habe 'he will be having' na willt i haz 'he would have'
Perfective i na gyhabe '(that) he have', 'to have' i na gyhaz '(that) he had', 'to have had' na willt i gyhabe 'he will have' na willt i gyhaz 'he probably had'

Historical changes

Wulfilan Gothic to Post-Gothic

Vowels

Wulfilan Gothic had three (in some analyses five) short vowels and seven long vowels. The short vowels were maintained in Post-Gothic and ē merged with ei:

  • Got. mēs /eː/ → Post-Got. meis /iː/

Wulfilan Gothic already showed signs of merging ē with ei attested in variant spellings such as akeit for akēt and leikeis for lēkeis. In Post-Gothic this merger was complete.

Syllable-final h /h/ was lost with compensatory lengthening of the previous vowel:

  • Got. mahts /mahts/ → Post-Got. māts /maːts/
  • Got. raíhts /rɛhts/ → Post-Got. ráits /rɛːts/
  • Got. slaúhts /slɔhts/ → Post-Got. sláuts /slɔːts/

This promoted ā /aː/ from a marginal phoneme to a common one.

Consonants

The proposed Thurneysen's law became fully operational in Post-Gothic, although it was modified:

  1. Spirants gained or lost voice in dissimilation with the consonant beginning the previous syllable. This occurred after all syllables, not only unstressed ones.
  2. Clusters cease to be treated differently from simple consonants in their effect on the gain or loss of voice in fricatives of subsequent syllables.
  • Got. giba → Post-Got. gifa
  • Got. bida → Post-Got. biþa
  • Got. dagam → Post-Got. daχam
  • Got. máiza → Post-Got. máisa

Note that medial b, d, g, /b, d, g/ had the allophonic values [β, ð, ɣ] between vowels.

h did not voice to g because it was a glottal fricative [h], not [x]. It remained unchanged except syllable-finally when it elided with compensatory lengthening of the previous vowel.

g devoiced to a velar fricative [x], transcribed here as χ.

Between a nasal and a following liquid consonant, a voiced plosive was inserted:

  • Got. timrjan → Post-Got. timbrjan (note that timbrjan already existed as a variant in Wulfilan Gothic)
  • P-Gmc. *þunraz → Got. *þunr → Post-Got. þundr

Prefixes such as in- and un- were unaffected however.

Development of Niemish proper

Prepalatal gemination

With the exception of h, w, consonants followed by j were geminated in a similar process to that seen in West and East Germanic but much more extensive, as in Italo-Romance. Sievers's law was no longer operational at this time, as the change also occurred after long vowels (which were subsequently shortened):

Coronal consonants were palatalised during this gemination, and the voiced affricate /dz/ converted to /z/. It is thought that voiced sibilants degeminated before compensatory shortening occurred, but it is also possible that - as with h, w - geminated voiced fricatives were simply disallowed at all stages (this also accounts for why b, d, g ceased to be fricatives with gemination).

tj, dj, þj, sj, zj → /tts, ddz, þþj, ʃʃ, ʒʒ/ → /tts, z, ttj, ʃʃ, ʒ/ → /tt͡s, z, tt͡ʃ, ʃʃ, ʒ/

  • Got. daddjan*daddzandazond
  • Got. skaþjan*skæþþjan*skættjanskaczond
  • Got. láisjan*lēʃʃanleszond

The prepalatal gemination was a very early sound change, likely beginning in late Post-Gothic itself. The coronal palatalisation is also found in early Romance and what little is attested of the closely related Vandalic language.

It is thought that dj initially became */ddz/ before /z/, both because it patterns with tj → /tts/ and because Gothic daddjan became dazond; had degeminated /z/ arisen in the Post-Gothic period, extended Thurneysen's law would have devoiced the consonant to give *dasond. There are no examples of z arising from the coronal palatalisation being affected by extended Thurneysen's law.

The voiceless fricative þj was stopped to /tj/ later, during the Middle Niemish period.

Voiceless plosives also geminated before the syllabic liquid consonants l, m, n, r:

Other consonants did not:

Epenthesis

A epenthetic vowel was inserted before syllabic consonants:

  • i if the vowel in the previous syllable was i ē or ei in Gothic
  • i if the final consonant was palatal or palatalised:
    • Got.

Otherwise:

  • o before syllabic l, m, or r in feminine words:
  • Got. fōdrfúdor
  • In all other cases, the epenthetic vowel was y:

Nouns affected by epenthesis did not experience epenthesis in inflected forms that lacked syllabic consonants in the first place. This lead to the formation of syncopating nouns:

First umlaut (umlaut pattern 1. or i-umlaut)

The first umlaut only affected vowels that were short. Niemish at this stage still preserved the Post-Gothic distribution of long and short vowels, where not shortened by the prepalatal gemination.

Case Post-Gothic Medieval Niemish Niemish
Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural
Nominative daχs daχōs dach dachas dach dachs
Accusative daχ daχans
Genitive daχis daχei dächis dächī dächs däche
Dative daχa daχam dacha dachą dach dachą
Case Post-Gothic Medieval Niemish Niemish
Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural
Nominative waúrts waúrtōs wort wortas wort worts
Accusative waúrt waúrtans
Genitive waúrtis waúrtei wurtis wurtī wurts wurte
Dative waúrta waúrtam worta wortą wort wortą

Second umlaut (umlaut pattern 2. or a-umlaut)

The second umlaut affected Post-Gothic short i and u and long ái and ei (the last one under limited circumstances). There is debate about whether the second umlaut in fact occurred before the first umlaut, but the current names for the two umlauts are too well established now for renaming them to be practical.

When followed by a back vowel in the following syllable, short i and u were lowered to e and o (see Medieval Niemish in the tables). These lowered vowels persisted after apocope eliminated the original trigger of umlaut, elevating short e and o to full phonemes in their own right, with i/e and u/o alternation often accounting for the difference between nominative singular and dative singular, or genitive singular and nominative plural:

Case Post-Gothic Medieval Niemish Niemish
Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural
Nominative hunds hundōs hund hondas hund honds
Accusative hund hundans
Genitive hundis hundei hundis hundī hunds hunde
Dative hunda hundam honda hondą hond hondą
Case Post-Gothic Medieval Niemish Niemish
Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural
Nominative wiχs wiχōs wich wechas wich wechs
Accusative wiχ wiχans
Genitive wiχis wiχei wichis wichī wichs wiche
Dative wiχa wiχam wecha wechą wech wechą

The second umlaut affected Post-Gothic long ái and ei slightly differently. When followed by a plain consonant (or when not followed by a front vowel in the following syllable in the second umlaut first hypothesis) , ái [ɛː] was broken to first [jɛ] then lowered to [ja], and ei was lowered to /ɨː/:

Second umlaut was unable to occur in ja- or ju-stem nouns, and only occured in the singular of i- and u-stems. This gave rise to the three stems all Niemish masculine nouns belong to: hard (a-stems), soft (ja- and u-stems) and mixed (i- and u-stems).

Feminine nouns either underwent the second umlaut in all inflected forms (jō-, jōn- and ein-stems) or not at all (all others). Thus as with first umlaut, vowel alternations due to second umlaut do not occur in feminine nouns. Note that ái [ɛː] is not considered a front vowel for the purposes of second umlaut; the umlaut was also predicated on vowel height and ái as a low vowel could trigger second umlaut:

The coronal palatalisation was still active when the second umlaut happened, as:

  • Got. taíhun → Post-Got. taíhuntáintsjaǹtzán ("ten")
  • Got. dáigs → Post-Got. dáiχsdjachzách ("dough")
  • P-Gmc. *sairaz → Post-Got. sáirssjarszár ("sore")

The fricatives that arose from coronal palatalisation were analogically extended to all forms of word where it arose, even those forms where no second umlaut had taken place.

Development of nasal vowels

Wherever a nasal consonant occurred word-finally or before a spirant in Post-Gothic, it disappeared in favour of nasalisation of the previous vowel. The length of the vowel was not affected, or else any change in vowel length happened too late to affect the first umlaut and was ultimately rendered irrelevant by syllable weight neutralisation:

After syncope, /ml, nl, mr, nr/ were reintroduced into the language outside of prefixes.

Subsequently, simple /n/ was lost before liquid consonants /l, m, r/ with compensatory gemination of the liquid consonant:

This did not happen to geminated /n/:

There was no compensatory gemination when the syllable with the nasal coda was unstressed, as with words prefixed with an-, in-, un-:

  • Got. unlustus*unlustųlust ("lethargic, unenergetic")
  • P-Gmc. *unrehtaz*unriatųrat ("crooked, wrong")

/m/ was not lost (except in Westlandic), but experienced stop insertion much as in Post-Gothic:

Early medieval Niemish had forms such as somar and somor, which developed into sǫwr in the Westlandic dialect. Presumably the /b/ was inserted into the definite form somran, the /o/ lowered by the /mb/ to give sumbran, and the /b/ later spread to all forms of the word by analogy. Likewise, the Westlandic form developed from somransǫwran in a sound change more akin to that described above for /n/ with similar analogical spreading.

Nasal vowels followed by a fricative in unstressed final syllables lost their nasalisation:

Nasals that formed the end of a root, as in háims and aljan were either not lost or more likely restored by analogy with forms with inflectional endings; the Niemish descendants of these words are ham and ällin.

S-palatalisation

Much like Slavic and Indo-Iranian languages (and to an extent High German), Niemish changed Post-Gothic /s, z, t͡s/ to /ʃ, ʒ, t͡ʃ/ before /r, w/ and after /r, uː, iː/:

This introduced a simple /ʃ/ sound in addition to the geminated /ʃʃ/ that arose with the prepalatal gemination.

S-palatalisation was blocked before plosives:

Emergence of /ɨː/

Long /iː/ (from Gothic ei and ē) became y /ɨː/ when preceded by a labial or labialised consonant (/p, b, m, f, w, kʷ, gʷ, hʷ/) and not followed by a front vowel in the next syllable. Labialised velars and glottals were subsequently delabialised:

  1. At some point qēns and qinō merged into one word.

As this sound change was blocked before palatalised consonants, all affected words gained umlaut pattern 2. (rarely umlaut pattern 1. in polysyllabic roots) if the stem alternated between hard and soft endings in flexional forms.

Labialisation

/kʷ, gʷ, hʷ/ were labialised before back vowels to /p, b, f/:

Gemination by assimilation

After a stressed vowel, /p/ arising from /kʷ/ geminated:

Presumably the same would have happened to /b/ arising from /gʷ/, but ungeminated /gʷ/ did not occur after vowels in Gothic.

WHen /w/ followed any other consonant preceded by a stressed vowel, it elided, causing the consonant to geminate in compensation (unless this consonant could not occur as a geminate in Niemish, in wich case the /w/ simply elided):

A limited form of the Boukulos rule came into effect, where /wɔ, wo, wu/ immediately after an initial consonant delabialised:

The Boukolos rule did not apply absolutely word-initially:

Depalatalisation of labials and /r/

The phonemes /pʲ, bʲ, mʲ, rʲ/ depalatalised before stressed back vowels and at the end of a word:

  • PGmc. *paidō → Medieval Niemish piadəpád ("cloak, overcoat")
  • PGmc. *bainą → Medieval Niemish bianbán ("bone")
  • PGmc. *mainą → Medieval Niemish mianmán ("perjury")
  • Got. raíhts → Medieval Niemish riatrát ("straight, correct")
  • PGmc. *ribją → Post-Gothic *rifi → Medieval Niemish riffjrìff ("rib, spoke")
  • Got. sōkāreis → Medieval Niemish sukarjsúkar ("seeker")

The same applied to the consonant clusters /prʲ, brʲ, wrʲ/:

  • Got. bráiþs → Medieval Niemish briaþbrás ("broad, wide")

But not other such consonant + /rʲ/ clusters:

The fact that /r/ was also depalatalised at the beginnings and ends of words suggests that Medieval Niemish had a distinction between /r, rʲ/ and /ɾ, ɾʲ/ similar to Spanish and Old Irish, although such a distinction was not observed in writing.

The phonemes /r, rʲ/ would have occurred only at the beginnings and ends of words, while /ɾ, ɾʲ/ only occurred word-medially (unlike in Spanish where both can occur medially, and Old Irish where both can occur medially and finally). Like in Irish, /rʲ/ merged with /r/ and ultimately /r/ and /ɾ/ merged (as /ɾ/ in Irish, as /r/ in Niemish):

Palatalisation was preserved in stem-final labials and /r/ where the flexional ending began with a vowel:

Deaffrication of /t͡s/

Between vowels, ungeminated /t͡s/ became /s/:

  • Got. bráiþs → Medieval Niemish briaþ → briaʦ → brás ("broad, wide")
  • Got. maþa → Medieval Niemish maþe → maʦe → másen ("larva")

Syllable weight neutralisation

Although open syllable lengthening occurred in all dialects of Niemish, the result was not the same in all dialects.

Open-syllable lengthening was simplest in the Panian dialect, where it affected all stressed open syllables. Consequently vowel length is not phonemic in Panian, other than those of the lowland fringe which have regained it by ceasing to distinguish geminate consonants.

In the Great Plains dialect (and by extension the Standard), open syllable lengthening was blocked before voiceless plosives.

The Westlandic dialect underwent the law of open syllables: where possible, consonants in the syllable coda were resyllabified into the onset of the following syllable. Consequently, more syllables became analysed as open in Westlandic than in other dialects, and open syllable lengthening affected a greater number of words. It also has lost geminate consonants, although vowels before historic geminate consonants remain short.

The Capitoline dialect is a special case. It developed as a koiné from numerous dialects in the capital. It is thus broadly similar to the standard, other than shortening historically long vowels before voiceless plosives (this is due to spelling pronunciation and hypercorrection) and loss of geminate consonants.

Notes

  1. ^ a b ⟨ij, uw⟩ are properly long vowels, only represented with this spelling where morphologically motivated,
    as in frij /fʲrʲiː/, frije /fʲrʲiːjə/
    and triuw /tʲrʲuː/, triuwe /tʲrʲuːvʲə/.
  2. ^ a b c Initial vs. non-initial shapes: Є/Е, Ѻ/О, IA/Ѧ.
  3. ^ In words of Greek origin, И and І correspond to Eta and Iota respectively. In the words of native origin И is used where it alternates with Є/Е, otherwise І.
  4. ^ In words of Greek origin, О and Ѡ correspond to Omicron and Omega respectively. In the words of native origin О is used where it alternates with ОУ, otherwise Ѡ.
  5. ^ a b c Letters Ѯ, Ѱ, and Ѵ are used for copying Greek spelling of loanwords (especially for names and toponyms).
  6. ^ a b c The final -n is inserted before words beginning with a vowel.
  7. ^ tabol is no longer extant in Niemish, although the dual definite form Tabla is still used as a name for the game Backgammon.