Vijay wrote: ↑Sun Jul 25, 2021 12:58 pm
What the hell even is this thread?!
I don't know why he did not just post to the Paleo-European languages thread - perhaps he felt that he was not welcome there because
everybody disagreed with him. But that is nothing that could be circumvented by starting a new thread in the same forum where
the same people are around and will disagree with him here too.
Yet, I wouldn't say that
everything Talskubilos posted was
automatically wrong; for instance, I conceded that his "Baltoid" and my "Southern IE" may be the same thing, only viewed from very different angles and thus interpreted in different ways.
But concerning the oddities of Basque, I feel that Proto-Basque, as reconstructed by Mitxelena, was
weirder than Modern Basque, the latter having at least a phonology that doesn't really look out of place in Western Europe, while the former had one that is wildly different from anything we now know in Western Europe. Apparently, Basque
converged towards the surrounding IE languages (and Iberian looks quite similar to Proto-Basque). It is harder to say how bizarre the Proto-Basque morphosyntax was; at least, I haven't seen a reconstruction of that yet.
One question where Talskubilos and I (and with me, most historical linguists) disagree is whether Basque came from the steppe together with IE (which appears to be T.'s position) or it is the last surviving language of pre-IE Europe, probably descending from the language of the Neolithic Cardial culture. The Yamnaya expansion from the steppe had a northern and a southern wing, as I already said, and one of them, probably the northern one, is the origin of all the IE languages spoken today, but what did the southern Yamnaya speak? My guess, a different branch of IE which Anatolian is the only part of that has left written records; while T. thinks, it seems, that they spoke Proto-Vasconic. But what then to make of Anatolian? Also, I feel as if "Basque from the steppe" was an attempt to save or strengthen Vasco-Caucasian, the notion that Basque was related to NWC and NEC. But just
why? Basque has
one thing in common with those two families (of which we don't even know whether they are related to each other or not; they actually have very little in common with each other), and that is ergativity - a far too narrow base to build a relationship hypothesis on. Ergative languages are common enough around the world; it is the same kind of canard as with the Semitic substratum in Insular Celtic because both are VSO.