Carpathian historical development: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "'''Carpathian''' is descended from Proto-Indo-European. This language in turn is the parent language of the vast majority of European languages (including English, German, Spanish, French, etc). Proto-Carpathian gradually evolved into various modern Carpathian dialects during the first millennium CE, concurrent with the Slavic, Avar and Hungarian contact. There is no scholarly consensus concerning either the number of stages involved in...")
 
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*'''Common Carpathian''' (1000 BCE — 500 CE) — the stage with the earliest identifiable dialectal distinctions and borrowings from other languages. At this stage Paleo-Balkan influence is prominent.
*'''Common Carpathian''' (1000 BCE — 500 CE) — the stage with the earliest identifiable dialectal distinctions and borrowings from other languages. At this stage Paleo-Balkan influence is prominent.
*'''Late Carpathian''' (500 BCE — present) — gradual development of individual Carpathian dialects. The influence of the Slavic languages is prominent at this stage.
*'''Late Carpathian''' (500 BCE — present) — gradual development of individual Carpathian dialects. The influence of the Slavic languages is prominent at this stage.
===Split from Late Indo-European===
===Split from Late Proto-Indo-European===
Proto-Carpathian exhibits the [[w:Centum and satem languages|satem]] development wherein Proto-Indo-European (PIE) palatovelar consonants became affricates or fricatives, conventionally indicated as *ś and *ź.
Proto-Carpathian exhibits the [[w:Centum and satem languages|satem]] development wherein Proto-Indo-European (PIE) palatovelar consonants became affricates or fricatives, conventionally indicated as *ś and *ź.
* *ḱ → *ś
* *ḱ → *ś
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