w > kv / _# happened in Faroese, apparently including semivowels ejected in the Great Faroese Vowel Shift - e.g. kúgv [kʰɪkf]
I'm not sure if a no-closing-diphthongs analysis would work for Faroese like it does for English, but the details of skerping make it look like one would - maybe *kuː > *kuw > *kiw > *kiwː > *kigʷː > kʰikv? (If orthographic ú is /iw/, that'd also explain [ʊi̯] for í -- instead of iː uː > əj əw as in English, iː uː > uj iw.)
I don't, but I might have. Index Diachronica has j > s in Blackfoot.
veryStrangerCoug wrote: ↑Thu Dec 05, 2019 11:45 am How common is /ᵐb ⁿd ᵑɡ/ without corresponding /ᵐp ⁿt ᵑk/?
this is a little weirdthe voiceless lenis stops become aspirate stops
Long/short? Or just unlenited/lenited (Celtic), or write it off as some vague and practically undefinable thing that's nevertheless obviously there (Korean).Given the above, how might "fortis" and "lenis" be defined in the proto-language itself as opposed to in its daughters?
You can get 'favored but not prohibited' by vowel loss at word edges or consonant cluster simplification. Maybe lenition in most postvocalic environments, or cluster reduction + initial consonants arbitrarily become fortis just because.Further, if I decide this is a branch of an even earlier proto-language, how might the distinction develop in the first place with the result that fortis consonants are favored word-initially and lenis consonants are favored word-finally (but the other way around not being phonotactically prohibited)?