Verse:Chlouvānem Inquisition/Līlasuṃghāṇa: Difference between revisions

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==Līlasuṃghāṇi Vernacular==
==Līlasuṃghāṇi Vernacular==
The vernacular language, spoken by about 70% of the inhabitants (a good number of residents come from other areas of the country), is part of the Jade Coast dialect continuum and has traits of both coastal Nanašīrami dialects to the east and Lanamilūki Valley ones to the south. A noticeable characteristic in two thousand years of evolution from [[Chlouvānem]] is the restructuring of the vowel system. Original Chlouvānem vowels all diverged in quality (often through diphthongization) and vowel length has later become phonemic based on syllable structure. The regular developments of Chlouvānem vowels are as follows:
The vernacular language, spoken by about 70% of the inhabitants (a good number of residents come from other areas of the country), is part of the Jade Coast dialect continuum and has traits of both coastal Nanašīrami dialects to the east and Lanamilūki Valley ones to the south. A noticeable characteristic in two thousand years of evolution from [[Chlouvānem]] is the restructuring of the vowel system. Original Chlouvānem vowels all diverged in quality (often through diphthongization) and vowel length has later become phonemic based on syllable structure.  
* a > a ; å /ɔ/ if followed by '''r''' or '''l''' plus a stop.
* ā > å /ɔ/
** both '''a''' and '''ā''' become ø /œ/ when followed by a nasal and a stop
* e > e ; eu /ɛʊ̯/ when stressed in a closed syllable
* ė > oi /ɔɪ̯/ (through intermediate *ei)
* i > i
* ī > æi /ɛɪ̯/
* u > u /y/
* ū > o /u/
* o > uo /uɪ̯/
* å > o /u/
* æ > e
* ą > å /ɔ/
* ę > æ /ɛ/
* į > i
* ų > u /y/
* ai, au > æ /ɛ/
* ei > oi /ɔɪ̯/
* ea, oe > ьeu /jɛʊ̯/ (''ь'' results in a palatal consonant, cf. liloe > ''ldzieu'' [ɴ̆dzjɛʊ̯])
* ou > o /u/
* ąi > ai
* ęi > æi /ɛɪ̯/
* ąu > a
* ṛ, ṝ > år /ɔʁ/ or /ɔˤ/


As for consonants, like all Nanašīrami dialects the Līlasuṃghāṇi vernacular has lost contrast between /s/ and /ʂ/, having only a retroflex in most contexts; unlike such dialects, however, /ɕ/ developed to // (possibly through /ɧ/), like in dialects to the west, including Galiākñi. Chlouvānem ''-lt'' and ''-ld'' which became word-final are particular in Nanašīrami dialects as many areas developed them differently. They evolved to /ɴ̆/ with stød in Līlasuṃghāṇi, just as in most Lanamilūki Valley vernaculars - young speakers in urban Līlasuṃghāṇa often front it in this position almost to [ð], sounding very similar to the Danish soft ''d''. This evolution is particularly different from other Nanašīrami dialects, cf. the result of the word "Yunyalīlta" in various vernaculars of Nanašīrama, Talæñoya, and Lgraṃñælihaikā - which shows very well the various developments of the Līlasuṃghāṇi urban vernacular, which is roughly in the middle of this area:
The most notable phonetic developments from classical Chlouvānem include:
* Līlasuṃghāṇa (urban): ''yunylæilt'' [ˈjyːɲˌɴ̆ɛɪ̯ˤɴ̆]
* Various early consonant mergers: palatalized dentoalveolars first merged with the palatals, while // and /ɴ̆ʲ/ shifted to /mj ɴ̆j/ and /ʀʲ/ to /ʑ/. /f/ was also probably shifted to */hʷ/ before merging with /ɦ/ into /h/ (the intermediate *// stage explains some other changes explained below); /ɦ/ however had the tendency of aspirating an unaspirated ''voiced'' stop earlier in the word, as long as only vowels or sonorants came in between; grammatically, ''-h'' was also generalized as a case ending in the direct case to '''all''' "h-class nouns" (this will have a major phonological impact later on). The glottal stop disappeared, leaving vowels in hiatus.
* Mālekṣam (village in southern Līlasuṃghāṇa qst.): ''yunylæalt'' [ˈjyːɲˌɴ̆ɛˤo̯t]
* The first syllable of the main root (the head, in compounds) always took fixed primary stress. If a root has four syllables or more, the second-to-last also takes secondary stress.
* Jāryakūraṇa (central Nanašīrama): ''yunylæitl'' [ˈjyːɲˌɴ̆ɛɪ̯tɬ]
* The first of many vowel changes started with the disappearance of breathy-voiced vowels. They mostly merged with the vowels of the same quality but long (but '''ą''' was retracted; note that the same quality of ''ę'' is the one of ''æ'', not ''e''), often leaving however their trace by aspirating an immediately following or preceding stop.
* Kareahåmba (northeastern Nanašīrama): ''yunylætel'' [juɲˈɴ̆ɛːtəl]
* The so-called (first) "Southern Vowel Shift" took place - ultimately adding many new phonemic vowel qualities but eliminating phonemic length; its changes were many but can be resumed this way:
* Haryanauka (southeastern Nanašīrama): ''yunьlæitḷ'' [jynʲˈɴ̆ɛɪ̯təl]
** a → '''a''', but '''å''' /ɔ/ before either '''r''' or '''l''' and a stop;
* Kaldaṣūṣa (capital of Lgraṃñælihaikā dioc.): ''yuinliǹd'' [ˈjui̯nʲˌɴ̆iŋd]
** ā → '''å''' /ɔ/
* Lunahīkam (capital of Talæñoya dioc.): ''yunyeliëld'' [ˌjunjeˈɴ̆iˤəɴ̆]
*** both short and long /a/ became, however, '''ø''' /œ/ in a close syllable before a nasal; long /a/ also underwent this change before /j/.
* Haɂipūlla (southern jungles of Talæñoya): ''yuñelild'' [ˌjũj̃eˈɴ̆iˤɴ̆]
** e → '''e''' and ė → *ei
** i became /e̝/ while ī remained as a normal /i/; note that /ji/ became, however, /i/.
** u was fronted to /y/, while ū was only shortened to /u/
** o became (or remained?) /o/, while å was monophthongized to /ɔ/
** æ was lowered to /a/; ǣ (including from earlier ''ę'') remained the same, but shortened
** ai, au also gave '''æ''' /ɛ/
** oe, ei merged into /ɔɪ̯/
** ṛ, ṝ got an epenthetic '''å''' before.
* A new, at first allophonic, length contrast arose: stressed vowels in an open syllable became allophonically long, the others remained short.
* [[w:Stød|Stød]]ogenesis: both primarily- and secondarily-stressed long vowels, as well as VN and Vr clusters were allophonically pharyngealized when followed anywhere in the word by either a laryngeal consonant - excluding */hʷ/ - or a retroflex one.
* Syncope of all absolutely word-final unstressed vowels, as well as unstressed pretonic vowels (except if preceded by two consonants; if there are two consecutive syllables between two different stresses, then the first is syncopated if the first syllable's consonant is a sonorant and the other isn't), were deleted. Deleted /e̝/, /i/ umlauted a preceding vowel by raising it; /u/ by backing it. Long vowels became phonemic because of this.
* /h/ and /hʷ/ were deleted in all positions except before /e/, /a/, and /ɔ/; /ɴ̆/ was also deleted when preceding a consonant that is not a stop or /s/. This made stød phonemic, moreover becoming a distinct feature of "h-nouns".
* Vowel quality for non-mid vowels and their length were tied, with /eː e̝ː/ becoming /eː/ and their short counterparts becoming /e̝/; the same happened with /o/ which was raised to /u̝/.
* Stød is lost if there's another vowel with stød later in the word; this does not apply to compound words, except those that had already become full lexical units.
* Some more consonant changes resulted in the disappearance of unvoiced aspirated stops (which merged with the plain ones, except for '''th''' → /θ/), /gʱ/ > /h/, and merger of /s/ into /ʂ/; /ɕ/, meanwhile, was backed and labialized to /xʷ/. '''v''' was also hardened to /b/ between vowels if pretonic.
 
Some examples of changes in common words:
* ''lila'' "person" > *lyílah > *líːlah > *liːˤla > *liːˤl > ''lil'' /ɴ̆iːˤ/
* ''marta'' "city" > *mártah > *mårtah > *måˤrta > *måˤrt > ''mårs'' /mɔˤʌs/
* ''chlǣvānem'' "Chlouvānem" > *chlɛvånem > *chlɛvåːŋm > *šlɛwåːm > *šlɛbåːm > ''ɧæbåm'' /xʷɛˈbɔːm/
* ''līlasuṃghāṇa'' > *lyīlasugghāṇah > *lílasyˌghåṇah > *liːlasyghåːṇah > liːˤlasyghåːˤṇa > liːlsyghåːn > ''lilsuhåln'' /ˈɴ̆iːɴ̆ʂyˌhɔːˤŋ/


==Notes==
==Notes==
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