The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Somewhat on topic, what would y'all say are general all-round books about PIE? I'm talking about introduction, summaries, inflection tables, reference, etc. Preferably something from this century.
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Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
umm...the recent publication of Proto has some good summaries, history, and general info. other than that, theres Anthony's The Horse, The Wheel, and Language which I recently donated to my local library.
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Just "Proto" is vague - do you mean "Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global Hardcover – May 13, 2025" by Laura Spinney?
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Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
yes, but sadly i couldn't remember the full title and wasn't sure if i was remembering the wrong Spinny.Zju wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 2:47 pmJust "Proto" is vague - do you mean "Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global Hardcover – May 13, 2025" by Laura Spinney?
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Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
These two books discuss where and when PIE was probably spoken (Anthony predating the ancient DNA revolution, Spinney post-dating it), and how it spread (though Anthony only for Indo-Iranian); but they offer hardly anything about the language itself (I mean such things as phonology, morphology etc., which seem to me to be what Zju was asking for). For that, Indo-European Language and Culture by Benjamin W. Fortson IV (second edition 2010) is IMHO the best source, which also sums up the major developments for each branch. For lexicon, The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World by J. P. Mallory and D. Q. Adams, despite of all shortcomings (it is almost 20 years old, gives only roots for verbs, etc.) is still the most handy book I can think of. It is these two books which I use for my Hesperic project.
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Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
FWIW I like Winfred Lehmann's Theoretical Bases of Indo-European Linguistics. It's oldish by now (1993), but as Lehmann himself discusses, the basic data for PIE are and remain the handbooks published in the 19th century. (Maybe this has changed, but so far as I know the basic procedure is still "take the 19th century handbooks and apply a bunch of revisions.") Lehmann does not provide a lexicon, but he gives the phonological charts and morphological charts and, perhaps more importantly, explains in detail how they are produced. He also has chapters on syntax and lexicon.
Lehmann believes that Greek + Sanskrit are way too overemphasized in reconstruction, and that PIE was far simpler than either. This is consistent with modern understanding of grammaticalization, but a lot of people are very attached to the eight cases and three moods etc. of the Neo-Grammarians.
Lehmann believes that Greek + Sanskrit are way too overemphasized in reconstruction, and that PIE was far simpler than either. This is consistent with modern understanding of grammaticalization, but a lot of people are very attached to the eight cases and three moods etc. of the Neo-Grammarians.
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
I understood that, I just wanted to remark on the double meaning of "more laryngeals"WeepingElf wrote: ↑Wed Sep 10, 2025 12:58 pm I meant tokens, not types. LIV sometimes reconstructs a laryngeal where M&A have none, e.g. *HReC- where M&A just have *ReC-.
That's close to the approach I use for Tautisca, and anyway, it's not like LIV is an infallible source of truth; it's just a convenient collection of material.But as I said, I am not trying to reconstruct the language of the Bell Beaker people in a scholarly way (that is an endeavour which I deem impossible, at least at the current state of knowledge); I am only trying to re-create it - I am building a conlang that portrays, certainly very imprecisely, that language. And for that, it suffices to avoid obvious blunders - it need not be entirely correct.
As for not using a Hittite dictionary in order to avoid Near Eastern loans, you could of course cross-check the etymologies with Kloekhorst to exclude that. But OTOH, Hittite is not Proto-Anatolian, and even Proto-Anatolian has it's own developments and wouldn't be identical to a common ancestor with your Hesperic. In any case, it's your artistic freedom.
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Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
All valid points. The forms in the LIV are mostly part of the tripartite verb aspect system shown most clearly in Greek and Indo-Iranian, and I have Hesperic diverge before that unwieldy system emerged (I plan to have a functionally similar system in Old Albic, but it will be an innovation with a simpler morphology based on a single stem for all forms for each verb); also, many are limited to particular branches and are thus probably even younger than that and should not show up in a branch diverging that early. So I have decided to drop the effort to counter-check my verbs against the LIV. There are much easier ways of building reasonable-looking verb stems from the roots found in M&A.hwhatting wrote: ↑Fri Sep 12, 2025 2:45 pmI understood that, I just wanted to remark on the double meaning of "more laryngeals"WeepingElf wrote: ↑Wed Sep 10, 2025 12:58 pm I meant tokens, not types. LIV sometimes reconstructs a laryngeal where M&A have none, e.g. *HReC- where M&A just have *ReC-.
That's close to the approach I use for Tautisca, and anyway, it's not like LIV is an infallible source of truth; it's just a convenient collection of material.But as I said, I am not trying to reconstruct the language of the Bell Beaker people in a scholarly way (that is an endeavour which I deem impossible, at least at the current state of knowledge); I am only trying to re-create it - I am building a conlang that portrays, certainly very imprecisely, that language. And for that, it suffices to avoid obvious blunders - it need not be entirely correct.
As for not using a Hittite dictionary in order to avoid Near Eastern loans, you could of course cross-check the etymologies with Kloekhorst to exclude that. But OTOH, Hittite is not Proto-Anatolian, and even Proto-Anatolian has it's own developments and wouldn't be identical to a common ancestor with your Hesperic. In any case, it's your artistic freedom.![]()
This question reminds me of the discussion of a conlang project called "Britainese" in the CONLANG mailing list. Britainese is the creation of Ray Brown; it is a response on Andrew Smith's Brithenig taking a different approach. Ray does not apply Welsh sound changes to Latin as Andrew did, but extrapolates the well-known Romance dialect continuum northward, going at great lengths to make his creation as plausible as possible. And he is in his 80s, so he is worried that he may pass away before finishing his project (even if he is still in good health for his age). I feel that he is a bit too perfectionist about his conlang, trying a reconstruction where a re-creation would do. After all, who can tell what, in an alternative history where British Latin survived for whichever reason, a British Romance language would really look like? All we know is that it did not survive, probably because Britain, with its cool and wet climate where you had to import such commodities as important to the Mediterranean lifestyle as wine or olive oil from more southerly regions, just wasn't attractive enough for Roman settlers used to a sunnier climate.
Now, I am in my 50s, so my remaining lifetime will likely suffice to finish my project (unless something really bad happened to me), but I want to get Proto-Hesperic done such that I can go on deriving Old Albic from it within this year, so I shouldn't set the bar too high.
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Thanks for all the sources listed.
Indeed, that's what I was asking for.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 3:26 pm I mean such things as phonology, morphology etc., which seem to me to be what Zju was asking for
Fair point. What I'm hoping for is to get an up-to-date consensus of the most adequate revisions without having to read a few dozen papers.
Best of luck with that!Now, I am in my 50s, so my remaining lifetime will likely suffice to finish my project (unless something really bad happened to me), but I want to get Proto-Hesperic done such that I can go on deriving Old Albic from it within this year, so I shouldn't set the bar too high.
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Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
So I hope I could be helpful.Zju wrote: ↑Fri Sep 12, 2025 4:01 pm Thanks for all the sources listed.
Indeed, that's what I was asking for.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 3:26 pm I mean such things as phonology, morphology etc., which seem to me to be what Zju was asking for
Well, IE historical linguistics isn't nearly as fast-moving as archaeogenetics, so a book from 2006 can be considered reasonably up to date (at least for conlanging purposesFair point. What I'm hoping for is to get an up-to-date consensus of the most adequate revisions without having to read a few dozen papers.
Thank you!Best of luck with that!Now, I am in my 50s, so my remaining lifetime will likely suffice to finish my project (unless something really bad happened to me), but I want to get Proto-Hesperic done such that I can go on deriving Old Albic from it within this year, so I shouldn't set the bar too high.
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Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
This idea may be utter bullfrogs, but: Is is possible that the Italic and Celtic genitive singulars in *-î have anything to do with the PIE appurtenance suffix *-ih2 (perhaps borrowed from another, lost IE language of Western Europe)?
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
That's actually an explanation that I have seen presented by serious scholars. But why should it be a loan?WeepingElf wrote: ↑Mon Nov 24, 2025 11:34 am This idea may be utter bullfrogs, but: Is is possible that the Italic and Celtic genitive singulars in *-î have anything to do with the PIE appurtenance suffix *-ih2 (perhaps borrowed from another, lost IE language of Western Europe)?
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Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Indeed, why should it? That was only a hedge for the case that direct inheritance was impossiblehwhatting wrote: ↑Mon Nov 24, 2025 12:17 pmThat's actually an explanation that I have seen presented by serious scholars. But why should it be a loan?WeepingElf wrote: ↑Mon Nov 24, 2025 11:34 am This idea may be utter bullfrogs, but: Is is possible that the Italic and Celtic genitive singulars in *-î have anything to do with the PIE appurtenance suffix *-ih2 (perhaps borrowed from another, lost IE language of Western Europe)?
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
*-ī is the expected outcome of *-ih2 in both Italic and Celtic, I think. It's only Greek and Tocharian (I think) that do the -ia thing.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Mon Nov 24, 2025 12:52 pmIndeed, why should it? That was only a hedge for the case that direct inheritance was impossiblehwhatting wrote: ↑Mon Nov 24, 2025 12:17 pmThat's actually an explanation that I have seen presented by serious scholars. But why should it be a loan?WeepingElf wrote: ↑Mon Nov 24, 2025 11:34 am This idea may be utter bullfrogs, but: Is is possible that the Italic and Celtic genitive singulars in *-î have anything to do with the PIE appurtenance suffix *-ih2 (perhaps borrowed from another, lost IE language of Western Europe)?![]()
LZ – Lēri Ziwi
PS – Proto Sāzlakuic (ancestor of LZ)
PRk – Proto Rākēwuic
XI – Xú Iạlan
VN – verbal noun
SUP – supine
DIRECT – verbal directional
My language stuff
PS – Proto Sāzlakuic (ancestor of LZ)
PRk – Proto Rākēwuic
XI – Xú Iạlan
VN – verbal noun
SUP – supine
DIRECT – verbal directional
My language stuff
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
It has been proposed that the feminine suffix -ix, -icis goes back to -ih2-, with so-called laryngeal hardening. That's not a generally accepted proposal (laryngeal hardening isn't a generally accepted phenomenon), but it's not outside the range of ideas taken serious by IE scholars.
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Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
The replacement of inherited *-osyo by *-î was einzelsprachlich within Italo-Celtic: Faliscan still had -osio, and both Oscan -eis and Umbrian -er are probably derived from it (or in any case not from *-î); Celtiberian had -o, either shorted from *-osyo or from the ablative *-od. Thus, Proto-Italo-Celtic, if that's a thing at all (I am pro-Italo-Celtic, but it hasn't been proved yet), still had the thematic gen.sg. *-osyo, and besides that a form with a different but related function in *-î < PIE *-ih2 which ousted *-osyo in those Italo-Celtic languages (such as Latin and Old Irish) that show a thematic gen.sg. in *-î. This teaches us a lesson how much one can err if one only looks at the major, well-attested languages of a group and neglects the minor ones.
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
I thought it was accepted for Proto-Germanic, c.f. the 1st person dual pronouns? Or do you mean for all of IE?hwhatting wrote: ↑Tue Nov 25, 2025 1:54 am It has been proposed that the feminine suffix -ix, -icis goes back to -ih2-, with so-called laryngeal hardening. That's not a generally accepted proposal (laryngeal hardening isn't a generally accepted phenomenon), but it's not outside the range of ideas taken serious by IE scholars.
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
I was talking about Cowgill's Law. (Reading the Wikipedia page for it again, it is apparently "controversial but increasingly accepted" so take that as you will.)
Then again, reading theories on this forum + reading Wiki* makes up approximately 95% of my IE knowledge, so if someone with more such knowledge would like to weigh in then please do.
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Well, the last time I saw the inside of a Historical Linguistics department is over 30 years ago. While I'm trying to keep up by reading articles, it's totally possible that a development has passed me by. Regarding Cowgill's law, the status I know is still "controversial", but it may indeed be "increasingly accepted".