cedh wrote: ↑Tue Mar 26, 2019 4:09 am
Ahzoh wrote: ↑Mon Mar 25, 2019 11:42 pm
Sort of related to the nature of this thread:
I can't find the ZBB thread wherein people discuss how i > k and u > p in some coda environment. Does anybody know where it is?
I don't know where to find that thread, but
here's a paper talking about such a type of sound change, although it lists /k/ as the outcome of both *i and *u / _#.
The same or similar changes also happened in some other languages not mentioned in that paper;
a later one by the same author gives some other examples from some Grasslands Bantu languages, Danish, and others. Blust (in
The Austronesian Languages) also implies that Singhi (Singai) is not the only Land Dayak language/dialect to have obstruent epenthesis after final high vowels (pg. 636), but he doesn't give any examples of other cases. From VERY briefly skimming
this book it looks like it holds for the Biatah, Bistaang, Pinyawa', and Bengoh dialects/languages, and for some speakers of Serambu, Benuk, and Sapug (pp. 167-168). Although the authors of that book seem to consider the final consonant after their -/ə/ (Blust's Singhi -/u/) to be /h/ = [h] in all dialects so I don't know in which varieties it's actually realized as [x], if any.
The ZBB thread where this change was discussed, incidentally, was the
Bizarre Sound Changes thread. Relevant posts are
this one and those following. (There's also a post there mentioning the Faroese epenthesis of glides after final high vowels, which underwent subsequent fortition to [ttʃ] and [kf]:
here.)