How would this work? Surely /pu/ and /put/ wouldn’t turn into /pkw/ and /pkwt/?
Sound Change Quickie Thread
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
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Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Oh, right, forgot to specify that this applies only to the offglide in diphthomgs. A better way to put it would be to write
Vʊ̯ → Vkʷ / _[#,S]
Where S is a voiceless plosive or sibilant.
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
So you’re saying that /pau/ → /pakʷ/ and /paut/ → /pakʷt/? Sounds a bit odd, but not implausible.
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Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Whether or not it's attested, you could explain it as /pau̯t → pawt → paɣʷt → pagʷt → pakʷt/, which looks realistic. And fortitioning offglide /u̯/ is certainly attested (e.g. Latin audiō → Aromanian avdu).
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Thanks, that looks perfect!
What about going /pau̯t → pawt → paɣʷt → paxʷt → paxt/ instead?
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
That would probably be more likely (having /gʷ/ before a voiceless stop isn't very common, unless it functions as an approximant). Albanian did the same thing (I think) except the final stage was xʷ → f instead of → x (e.g. Latin causa → kafshë).
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Modern Greek also does this: αυτός [a'ftos]. I don't know of any examples for syllable-final yod, but there must be some.
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Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
I've definitely seen *Vw > *Vk(ʷ) before in Tibeto-Burman, some Eastern Malayo-Polynesian also have *Vy, *Vw > Vp.
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Even if the Vj → Vʃ thing is unattested before, there certainly have been weirder examples of voicelessness spreading, like that one Native American language where /nt/ became /ht/ as the nasal became voiceless.
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
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Last edited by Whimemsz on Sun Jun 07, 2020 6:34 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
As an addendum to that, Icelandic also turned the old norse voiceless geminate consonants /pp tt kk/ into preaspirated clusters /hp ht hk/. This is how I derived my Vinlandic h+plosive clusters.
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Yeah, voicelessness can apparently spread really well sometimes, hence all my conlang diachronic shenanigans with devoicing. Yod becoming a postalveolar fricative during devoicing isn't unrealistic, is it? I just can't find any examples of it at all.
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Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
I think it’s plausible (didn’t Vulgar Latin fortite *j to something similar?).
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Quite plausible. Rioplatense Spanish has basically done that, in several steps (j > ʝ > ʒ > ʃ), but you can cut some of the intermediate steps out without it being unrealistic. You can either do it through glide fortition (which is very very common) plus devoicing, or just a voiceless [j] becoming [ç] (which happens in most English dialects in words like "huge").
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
I think youve found your solution but i just wanted to share one more idea ... an asymmetrical change, where first /f s x/ all merge as /x/, and then you have one change like /x/ > /k/ (with or without intermediaries). This /k/ could vary according to surrounding vowels, so youd have extra /c/ near front vowels and extra /k/ elsewhere. Helps if you like unbalanced inventories since this will give you a lot more /k/.Këkkytir wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2019 3:40 pm I have two questions:
- Under what realistic conditions can fricatives become related stops (or nasals)? Examples: f → p, s → t, x → k. I want to get rid of most of the fricatives in my conlang somehow but I was told that an unconditional change into stops is very unlikely.
Also, nobody mentioned nasals yet so ... I dont think getting nasals is very likely, ... if you dont make them into stops I would suggest approximants or simply deleting them.
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Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Unfortunately it doesn't apply to Vj diphthongs but onset jV, so more like maium [ˈmajjũː] > mayo [ˈmaʃo], iugum [ˈjʊgũː] > yugo [ˈʃuɣo]. I vaguely remember Nortaneous once mentioning an instance of Vj > Vʃ in one of his blogs though...Whimemsz wrote: ↑Thu Nov 28, 2019 8:23 pmQuite plausible. Rioplatense Spanish has basically done that, in several steps (j > ʝ > ʒ > ʃ), but you can cut some of the intermediate steps out without it being unrealistic. You can either do it through glide fortition (which is very very common) plus devoicing, or just a voiceless [j] becoming [ç] (which happens in most English dialects in words like "huge").
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Thank you! Actually, I like this solution very much, because /k/ > /c/ before front vowels would fit well into the palatalization scheme of the language.Pabappa wrote: ↑Fri Nov 29, 2019 1:26 amI think youve found your solution but i just wanted to share one more idea ... an asymmetrical change, where first /f s x/ all merge as /x/, and then you have one change like /x/ > /k/ (with or without intermediaries). This /k/ could vary according to surrounding vowels, so youd have extra /c/ near front vowels and extra /k/ elsewhere. Helps if you like unbalanced inventories since this will give you a lot more /k/.Këkkytir wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2019 3:40 pm I have two questions:
- Under what realistic conditions can fricatives become related stops (or nasals)? Examples: f → p, s → t, x → k. I want to get rid of most of the fricatives in my conlang somehow but I was told that an unconditional change into stops is very unlikely.
Also, nobody mentioned nasals yet so ... I dont think getting nasals is very likely, ... if you dont make them into stops I would suggest approximants or simply deleting them.
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Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
True, but you've still got precedent for spontaneous devoicing of a palatal-region fricative (not even needing to be next to a voiceless consonant like Greek's [w] > [v] > [f] in falling diphthongs)* plus about a million precedents for fortition of glides. (And of course the alternate path offered by the English example which makes it pretty clear, although it should be intuitively obvious even if we didn't have real-world examples, that a devoiced [j] can very naturally becoming [ç] or a similar fricative.)Ser wrote: ↑Fri Nov 29, 2019 12:23 pmUnfortunately it doesn't apply to Vj diphthongs but onset jV, so more like maium [ˈmajjũː] > mayo [ˈmaʃo], iugum [ˈjʊgũː] > yugo [ˈʃuɣo]. I vaguely remember Nortaneous once mentioning an instance of Vj > Vʃ in one of his blogs though...Whimemsz wrote: ↑Thu Nov 28, 2019 8:23 pmQuite plausible. Rioplatense Spanish has basically done that, in several steps (j > ʝ > ʒ > ʃ), but you can cut some of the intermediate steps out without it being unrealistic. You can either do it through glide fortition (which is very very common) plus devoicing, or just a voiceless [j] becoming [ç] (which happens in most English dialects in words like "huge").
*Of course, now that I think of it I suppose Spanish already offered precedent for the exact same change a few hundred years earlier...
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Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
How common is /ᵐb ⁿd ᵑɡ/ without corresponding /ᵐp ⁿt ᵑk/? I have a proto-language with a fortis-lenis split in the occlusives, and in one branch the fortis nasals become prenasalized stops while the lenis nasals become regular nasals.
Further, suppose I wanted to back-derive exactly how the fortis-lenis distinction was pronounced in the occlusives given how they develop in the daughter branches. I'm having trouble thinking of how to explain this clearly and concisely (partly because I don't have the sound changes fully fleshed out), but here goes. Here, fortis consonants will be distinguished from lenis consonants with an overdot on the latter.seven I miscounted—eight consonants in the proto-language that do not have a fortis-lenis distinction: *ʔ *h *s *r *l *w *ɉ *j. *ɉ is supposed to be reconstructed as /ɨ̯/, and the others I have reconstructed as in the IPA.
Further, suppose I wanted to back-derive exactly how the fortis-lenis distinction was pronounced in the occlusives given how they develop in the daughter branches. I'm having trouble thinking of how to explain this clearly and concisely (partly because I don't have the sound changes fully fleshed out), but here goes. Here, fortis consonants will be distinguished from lenis consonants with an overdot on the latter.
- What I describe above is how the nasals develop in the "northern" branch (in other words, *m *n *ŋ → /ᵐp ⁿt ᵑk/ and *ṁ *ṅ *ŋ̇ → /m n ŋ/); the stops *p *b *t *d *k *g become /p b t d k ɡ/, while *ṗ *ḃ *ṫ *ḋ *k̇ *ġ become fricative /f v θ ð x ɣ/ when lenis—pretty faithful except arguably for [ji ɨ̯ɨ wu] → /ʒi ɣɨ vu/.
- The "southern" branch preserves the fortis-lenis distinction only partially, though: the voiceless lenis stops become aspirate stops, *ḋ becomes /z/, *ṁ *ṅ → /w L/ conditionally (where L represent a liquid consonant—I have *ṅ → /r/ _r and *ṅ → /l/ where it elsewhere applies in mind), and the fortis-lenis distinction is otherwise lost.
Re: Sound Change Quickie Thread
Actually, pretty good. Swahili lacks a prenasalized voiceless stop. In fact actually, the presence of prenasalized voiceless stop that is unusual.
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