I don't see any reason why it would be implausible.bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Jan 13, 2021 7:21 am From what I can see, Proto-Germanic had consistent initial stress (though I’m very unfamiliar with the language, so please correct me if that is incorrect). This makes the syncope rule consistent — in disyllabic words, it is always the second vowel which is deleted. By contrast, my language has weight-sensitive stress, which usually ends up on the first syllable, but not always. Is posttonic vowel syncope still plausible with this stress rule, or does that make it implausible?
Tocharian A had movable stress and such extensive syncope that *ɨ became epenthetic - then again, syncope in Tocharian was totally independent of stress, and syncope had no problem deleting stressed vowels - IIRC even in TB where we know what the stress system was and can be pretty sure there was no independent stage with a different stress system, although I might be wrong about that.
Depends on how secondary stress is handled.Along related lines, what happens in multisyllabic words? e.g. would *tapakar with initial stress turn into tapkar, or tapakx, or what? What about long words with secondarily-stressed syllables?
It mostly didn't. I made that all up. Germanic tends to keep its 'postsyllables' separate from its main syllables, and not to have much interaction between the two - the main exception I know of is German -Pən -Tən -Kən > -pm̩ -tn̩ -kŋ̩, which I think can simplify into plain -m -n -ŋ. (You could probably have -pən -bən > -ˀm -m or something if you wanted.) In English, postsyllables are mostly separate, but grammatical words can have tighter binding: isn't [ɪdn̩] but business [bɪznɨs], of them [ʌb̪ɱ̩] but oven [ʌvən]. But given that [bɪdnɨs] is also attested, this is plausibly a result of dialect mixing.You list a bunch of ways in which final consonant clusters get reduced. This is of particular interest of me, as one of the biggest problems I’ve been having has been getting rid of final clusters in a nice way, without messing up the paradigms too much. (Or, more accurately, my whole goal with these sound changes to mess up some paradigms horribly, but keep the rest sane.) Do you happen to have any source going into more detail about exactly how the cluster reduction proceeded in the various Germanic languages? I feel this would help me get a better sense of what options I have.
But what interacts with what is basically a set of decisions that languages can make. (For an extreme example, consider the Paman languages where word-initial consonants were transphonologized onto second-syllable vowels.) In Sinitic, presyllables didn't interact with main syllables much and were mostly lost without compensation; in Tangut, presyllables were mostly transphonologized onto the vowel of the main syllable; and in some Mon-Khmer languages (like Nyaheun and Kriang) presyllables mostly interacted with initial consonants. I think the tricky part is that initials usually are more prominent (and carry more information) than codas - AmEng, with its (partially morphology-driven) unusually large codas and its preferential coda syllabification (e.g. lawyer), is extremely unusual here. (For extreme examples in the other, more usual direction, consider Georgian - does Georgian allow coda clusters? - or Wutung, which can tolerate [highly structured] initial clusters of up to four consonants but which doesn't allow coda consonants at all, except in three or so words where you can sort of get a word-internal syllable coda -n.)
What you're proposing is weird but doable, and it would probably have implications for the structure of the language in general.