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Revision as of 00:50, 23 February 2017 by Frrurtu (talk | contribs) (→‎Verbs)

Phonology

Consonants

Proto-Rttirrian had a fairly small consonant inventory; however, it was much more flexible than its daughter languages with regards to clusters. The following consonants are reconstructed:

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Retroflex Pharyngeal?
Nasal *m /m/ *n /n/ *rn /ɳ/
Plosive *p /p/
*b /b/
*t /t/
*d /d/
*k /k/
*g /g/
*rt /ʈ/
*rd /ɖ/
Fricative *f /ɸ/
*v /β/
*s /s/
*z /z/
Affricate *ch /t͡ʃ/
Approximant *w /w/ *y /j/ *rl /ɭ/
*rr /ɻ/
*l1
*l2
  • The exact pronunciation of the consonants transcribed as l1 and l2 is unknown.
  • Among the descendants of Proto-Rttirrian, these two sounds survived only in Proto-South-Rttirrian, where they merged into a single phoneme, */ʟ/. That phoneme corresponds to /l/ and many instances of the low tone in Gaju, and corresponds to /w/ and diphthongal /u/ in Rttirri. In all other descendants of Proto-Rttirrian, l1 and l2 disappeared as consonants and survive only in their effects on surrounding vowels.
  • Some linguists posit that they were pharyngeal approximants [ħ] and [ʕ], pointing to the fact that they generally had a backing effect on surrounding vowels in branches other than South Rttirrian. Others note that these backing effects were not uniform, and suggest that only l2 was pharyngeal while l1 was something like the velarized lateral [ɫ], or a lateral fricative [ɬ~ɮ].
  • Evidence that l1 was some type of fricative comes from the fact that the vowel a was allophonically raised when adjacent to f, v, s, and z, as well as l1, but the relevance of this observation is disputed. The realization of the vowel u was not affected by either consonant, suggesting that they were probably not velar.

Vowels

Proto-Rttirrian had a simple three-vowel system:

Front Central Back
High *i /i/ *u /u/
Low *a /ä/
  • The low vowel a was probably fronted and raised allophonically to something like [æ~e] adjacent to fricatives and l1.
  • The high back vowel u was probably lowered allophonically to something like [ʊ~ɔ] adjacent to velar consonants.

Grammar

Proto-Rttirrian had a moderate degree of fusional inflection.

Verbs

The following verb prefixes were used:

Person
1st 2nd 3rd
Sing. Pl. Sing. Pl. Sing. Pl.
Anim. Inan. Anim. Inan.
Past *mu- *mum- *apaf- *am- *bu- *pa- *bum- *bam-
Present *na- *nam- *akf- *sam- *gyu- *rta- *gim- *rtam-
Future *nay- *mi- *akay- *mi- *gi- *rti- *mi-
Tense #4 *l2an- *l2am- *l2ak- *l2am- *l2i- *l2art- *l2am-
  • The exact function of the fourth tense is unknown; it may have been a perfect aspect, an aorist, or something else entirely. It evolved into two verbal moods in Proto-South-Rttirrian and took on various tense and aspect functions in other descendants.
  • An i- was used to begin the stems of transitive verbs. By analogy, this would cause object pronouns to be affixed to the verb in Proto-South-Rttirrian.

The following auxiliary verbs existed:

Rttirri English
*tya to hope
*apta to plead
*ikrta to have to
*gamu to do something
habitually or generally

Auxiliary verbs, grammatically, were simple particles that did not inflect.

*Apaf-bva ikrta.
2SG.NOM.PST-leave have_to
You had to leave.

Only one inflectional mood was used: the subjunctive. It agreed with the tense of the verb:

Past *-mugi
Present *-nagi
Future *-nagji
Tense #4 *-l2agji

Auxiliary verbs

Ample auxiliary verbs were used. Some of these would later fuse to the verb to become inflectional moods. Similarly, certain past-tense and future-tense verb prefixes would become auxiliary verbs.

Nouns

Pronouns were suffixed with *-i for the accusative.

See also