Thanks! However, I actually did just manage to resolve my problem with vowel sequences: I discovered that Luganda had a nice morphophonological change where a high vowel > semivowel / _V, with all other V > Ø / _V, and so I decided to steal that. (Although in Luganda, the second vowel lengthens, which I'm not including.)Hallow XIII wrote: ↑Tue Apr 23, 2019 4:49 amIf you look at real-world examples of this, then the answer is that every vowel pair is liable to change individually. Sometimes you get patterns, like e.g. all back vowel + i diphthongs do the same thing, but not necessarily. For instance, Mongolic languages lost /j/ before /i/, and in modern dialects the resulting Vi diphthongs change in several ways: In Khalkha, <ai ei oi öi> coalesce into /{: E: 9: 2:/, but <üi ui> retain their original values of /uj Uj/ (except in the negative <-güi> /gwi, gHi/). In Chakhar, on the other hand, <ai> largely continues unchanged, but the front rounded vowels happen; and in Buryat <ai> coalesces but <oi> becomes /oE/ with a mid onglide (<öi> is lost as part of a general merger of short <ö> into <ü> initially and <e> elsewhere).bradrn wrote: ↑Thu Apr 11, 2019 10:05 pmThe problem I have is - exactly what happens? Take vowel deletion: if I have (say) 5 vowels, that makes 25 vowel pairs; which vowel gets deleted? What sort of rules have languages used to resolve this situation? (e.g. always delete first vowel, always delete second vowel, etc.) The same happens with epenthesis (which semivowel gets epenthesised?), coalescence (what do they coalesce to?), and diphthongization (it's unrealistic to have a diphthong for every vowel pair).náʼoolkiłí wrote: ↑Thu Apr 11, 2019 9:56 pm
Well the world's your oyster. Any one of these, or conceivably more than one depending on the vowel sequence, might happen. There are probably other processes that could happen that I'm not thinking of, too.
- Vowel deletion (with or without compensatory lengthening): **gaʔen → *gaen → ga(ː)n, ge(ː)n
- Consonant (e.g., glide) epenthesis: **gaʔen → *gaen → gajen
- Coalescence (±compensatory lengthening): **gaʔen → *gaen → gɛ(ː)n
- Diphthongization/glide formaiton: **gaʔen → *gaen → ga͡ɪn, gajn
- Metathesis: **gaʔen → *gaen → gane (This one might be a little cooky)
(BTW, what are /{: E: 9: 2: E/? I don't know which transcription method you're using)