bradrn wrote: ↑Thu Feb 11, 2021 6:40 pmI’m trying to track down a paper I saw some time ago (possibly linked by someone here?) but have now forgotten. It was about the details of rule application in sound changes which can be applied multiple times: I remember it citing two languages with the same sound change, except one language applied the rule left-to-right and the other applied it right-to-left. (I have a vague memory of the former language being Slovenian and the latter one being some Australian language, but can’t really remember.) Does anyone here happen to know which paper I’m talking about?
I don't remember that paper at all, but it reminds me of a difference I like between French/Spanish. From Latin to both languages, there's two interacting sound changes, the "first syncope" (of unstressed unchecked medial vowels, typically near /l r/, less so /n s/) and "intervocalic voicing", but somehow, in French the former one is applied first, and in Spanish the latter is applied first.
Classical Latin: vēritātem [weːrɪˈtaːtɛm]
spoken Late Latin ca. 4th century: [βereˈtaːte]
with first syncope: [βerˈtaːte]
with intervoc. voicing: [βerˈtaːde]
early Old French, 11th century: vertéṭ [veɾˈteθ]
with intervoc. voicing: [βereˈdaːde]
with first syncope: [βerˈdaːde]
Old Spanish, 13th century: verdad [βerˈdad]
And note you can't say Old Spanish underwent [-ret-] > [-rt-] > [-rd-] because on the other hand there's cu
rtus/a > co
rto/a, corpus > cuerpo(s), circā > cerca, gentēs > yentes... which show that intervocalic voicing must've actually been applied first, unlike French!