1,088
edits
m (→Phonology) |
(→Phonology: Formatting) |
||
Line 47: | Line 47: | ||
Note: | Note: | ||
* The "laryngeal" *q may have been a uvular plosive */q/, a glottal stop */ʔ/, a pharyngeal, or something else. In modern Ash it allophonically varies between [ʔ~ɦ~ħ]. | * The "laryngeal" {{ash|*q}} may have been a uvular plosive {{IPA|*/q/}}, a glottal stop {{IPA|*/ʔ/}}, a pharyngeal, or something else. In modern Ash it allophonically varies between {{IPA|[ʔ~ɦ~ħ]}}. | ||
* The nasals were likely poststopped or prestopped as they are in modern Ash and because they appear to derive at least in part from */NP/ clusters or prenasalised stops in PAI. | * The nasals were likely poststopped or prestopped as they are in modern Ash and because they appear to derive at least in part from {{IPA|*/NP/}} clusters or prenasalised stops in PAI. | ||
* The bilabial plosive *p was likely derived from */kɰ/ clusters or labialised */k/ in PAI, as Ish seems to preserve this more conservative configuration. | * The bilabial plosive {{ash|*p}} was likely derived from {{IPA|*/kɰ/}} clusters or labialised {{IPA|*/k/}} in PAI, as Ish seems to preserve this more conservative configuration. | ||
* Likewise the bilabial nasal *m would have come from simultaneously prenasalised and labialised {{ | * Likewise the bilabial nasal {{ash|*m}} would have come from simultaneously prenasalised and labialised {{IPA|*/nPw~ⁿPʷ/}} clusters or phonemes. | ||
Additionally the approximants might be viewed as allophones of the corresponding vowels: | Additionally the approximants might be viewed as allophones of the corresponding vowels: | ||
Line 63: | Line 63: | ||
| {{ash|*j~i}} | | {{ash|*j~i}} | ||
|} | |} | ||
Clusters of a glide followed or preceded by a regular vowel were allowed, as were any {{IPA|*/CC/}} clusters. | |||
Proto-Ash does not appear to have had any particular form of stress but later in the development of Ash stress would shift to the last heavy syllable of a phonetic word, resulting in various reductions and elisions of unstressed vowels. | Proto-Ash does not appear to have had any particular form of stress but later in the development of Ash stress would shift to the last heavy syllable of a phonetic word, resulting in various reductions and elisions of unstressed vowels. |
edits