Re: Evidence for Nostratic? (was Re: Proto-Uralic?)
From: | Rob Haden <magwich78@...> |
Date: | Monday, July 7, 2003, 15:23 |
On Sat, 5 Jul 2003 19:04:52 -0600, Muke Tever <muke@...> wrote:
>[Hopefully this hasnt been answered yet...*grumbles about sporadic internet
>hours*]
No, indeed it wasn't until you answered it. :D
>Mainly because regular Latin sound changes in medial syllables reduce short
>vowels before /r/ to /e/. Secondarily because the stem should be in
*corpes-,
>not _corpos-_ to begin with--_corporis_ is the anomaly, not _generis_.
Excellent! So my earlier hypothesis was correct! Thanks for the
explanation!
>Apparently what it was is all short vowels in medial syllables reduce to a
weak
>vowel that became /e/ before double consonants and /r/, /o/ then /u/
before /w/
>or dark /l/, and /i/ before single consonants and /N/.
Very interesting. It appears that Proto-Latin or Proto-Italic had a
complicated vowel-change scheme which depended heavily on the following
consonant. All the above changes could be explained by having all short
vowels in medial (unstressed, since Proto-Italic apparently had a regular
word-intial accent) syllables reduce to schwa /&/. However, what
is 'dark /l/'?
Later on in Latin, unstressed /e/ very often (if not always) became /i/.
>The exceptions to this being that original /i/ remained /i/ before double
>consonants, and, more relevantly, that /o/ > /i/ is nearly always restored
to
>/o/ when analogy permits it. The Latin -oris-type stem are an anomaly
caused by
>this, as the normal stem is -es- (seen in Greek, Sanskrit, Slavic,
Hittite, and
>Germanic):
>
> << Neut s-stems in -er-, like _genus, generis_, reflect *-es-;
> s-stems in -or- like _temporis_ to _tempus_ are secondary
> hypercorrect forms, and provide clear (if indirect) evidence
> of a period when /e/ and /o/ were in alternation in accord with
> [the rules above]. That is, a creation like _tempora_ is only
> possible if Romans could think that the stem-vowel -e- of
> intermediate *tempera was a weakened form of the vowel seen in
> the nom. *tempos. >>
> --New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin, §67.
I have that book too, but I never noticed that passage! But then again,
I've never read it from front to back, LOL. What that seems to suggest is
that Proto-Italic separated from PIE at a time when the Ablaut was not yet
formalized, or else Ablaut was still functioning.
So basically, I think that earlier *genes, *corpes became *genos, *corpos
on basis of analogy with masculine o-stems. Genitive singular *geneses >
generis, but *corpeses > *corperis > corporis. The question is, why was
generis kept that way, but *corperis became corporis analogically? Perhaps
the former was more common than the latter?
- Rob
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