Richard W wrote: ↑Wed Oct 07, 2020 8:07 am
Nortaneous wrote: ↑Tue Oct 06, 2020 11:16 pm
What grounds justify the rejection of the IE-internal etymology for *kʷekʷlos - or do you mean a different word for "wheel"?
Several:
- Striking Sumerian and Semitic look-alikes make one suspect that we have at best the (P)IE representative of a wanderwort - and then we have timing issues at projecting it back to PIE.
- It is a very odd formation from the root *kʷel. Could it be be a folk-etymology?
- It's not attested in Hittite (though I've a feeling we can't declare it as highly unlikely) and the Tocharian form feels quite different - though it would work as a borrowing parallel to core-IE.
- Numerous irregularities within core-IE - they were discussed here two boards ago.
- Is PIE *(s)ker, or its possibly reduced reduplicated apparent derivatives, a doublet? (Through different routes, this gives English ring and circus.)
Since the root is analyzable in PIE, non-analyzable lookalikes elsewhere should be assumed to be loans
from PIE. But that depends on whether the lookalikes in Sumerian and Semitic are analyzable, which I don't know.
Let's see what Adams says about the Tocharian forms:
TchA kukäl and B kokale reflect PTch *käuk(ä)le from PIE *kʷukʷlo- from *kʷₑkʷlo-. This *kʷukʷlo- apparently matches Greek kúklos ‘circle, wheel.’ (The semantic development ‘wheel’ > ‘wagon, chariot’ is paralleled by OCS kolo ‘wheel; wagon’ from *kʷolo-.) The Tocharian and Greek forms are closely related to, but phonologically distinct from, the *kʷekʷló- that lies behind Sanskrit cakrá- ‘circle, wheel,’ Old English hwēol ‘wheel,’ Lithuanian kãklas ‘neck’ (< *‘turner’), etc. Both *kʷₑkʷlo- and *kʷekʷló- are reduplicated derivatives of *kʷel- ‘revolve’ (P:639-640; MA:640).
The epenthetic vowel in TB seems a little weird, and I'm not sure where the PToch *äu is supposed to come from. (TB e ~ TA 0 is expected, and the TA epenthetic vowel is regular from there.) I'm not sure why there are two different forms, but the existence of two different forms doesn't necessarily imply a loan - cf. e.g. 'sun'.
Greek-Tocharian lookalikes are expected; Tocharian seems to have been somewhere between Germanic and Greek. Adams again:
Within the Northwestern Group, Tocharian was closest to Germanic of the surviving Indo-European groups, with secondary ties with Baltic and Latin. The Tocharians, however, separated themselves very early from the rest of this group. They moved south and/or east and came into contact with another group of Proto-Indo-European speakers, the Greeks, perhaps in Moldavia or thereabouts, perhaps in the first half of the third millenium-certainly before the Greeks entered the Balkans proper. Subsequently the Tocharians must have continued to drift eastward across the north Pontic steppes and then Central Asian steppes, perhaps in this latter location briefly associating with some group of pre-Indic speakers, ultimately to appear in history two thousand years later in Chinese Turkestan.
Nortaneous wrote: ↑Tue Oct 06, 2020 11:16 pm
And explosive growth doesn't necessarily imply massive substrate influence - Algonquian left American English a few words and not much else.
Whereas pre-IE populations gave rise to a very significant proportion of modern IE populations.
Fair, but cf. postcolonial Africa and India, although maybe it's too early to say.
Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Oct 07, 2020 10:46 am
What bothers me a little is how odd the system looks.
Is *a attested at all, aside from laryngeal influence? Or is it assumed to have existed, but beyond any possible reconstruction?
There's some disagreement about this. *a can be reconstructed, but it's rare and AFAIK it didn't participate in ablaut, so some scholars assume that any word with *a was a loan. I've seen some vague references to *a tending to co-occur with plain velars, which could then mirror *h2 in coloring *e to *a (and which would then probably be uvulars).
In more phonetic-looking reconstructions, *e *o are often rewritten as something like *ə *ɑ.
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Wed Oct 07, 2020 4:34 pm
Sound correspondences might be different depending on the source. For example, some words In Germanic have reduced labiovelars while others do not.
Examples?
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Wed Oct 07, 2020 4:36 pm
I'd put it that way instead: it's impossible to derive all the attested lexical items in IE langs from a single parent language.
That's practically trivial. For all attested lexical items in a language family to be reconstructible to a single common ancestor, you'd need for
zero attested lexical items to be loans ("sushi", "television"), ideophonic/sound-symbolic/etc. de novo coinage ("yeet", "chickadee", "barf") or highly irregular alterations ("chunk", "hork"), unamenable to any etymological method ("guy", probably "dog"), etc.
Duaj teibohnggoe kyoe' quaqtoeq lucj lhaj k'yoejdej noeyn tucj.
K'yoejdaq fohm q'ujdoe duaj teibohnggoen dlehq lucj.
Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq.