Re: derivation help?
From: | Grandsire, C.A. <grandsir@...> |
Date: | Friday, December 3, 1999, 11:57 |
Clinton Moreland-Stringham wrote:
>
> heya!
>
> So, I decided to go ahead with things, and am developing a "new" celtic lang
> without the meld with English. What I've been doing is taking Old irish words,
> deriving them in my head to what I think they should be, and then backtracking to
> how I got there. Very much an analeptic way of doing things (or is that proleptic?
> read Bohm to straighten it out). Anyway, I've come across a couble glitches I
> thought you folks might be able to help me with. I'll start with some standard
> transformation and the rules I found, and then go to the ones I didn't know how they
> got there. Any ideas on possible derivational rules would be greatly appreciated!
>
[snip of all those interesting examples]
>
> Okay, that should be enough to give the idea. On to my questions:
>
> OI. ana'al (anaal) 'breath' > A. an
> -loss of finals as normal
> But what about that long a? Only short vowels are lost normally.
> Maybe an earlier rule that shortens long vowels in the final, nonacc syllable? Of
> course, all non-initial syll are nonaccented, so...
>
I think that's pretty likely. I think Latin lost phonemic distinction
between long and short vowels that way: all unaccented vowels became
short and all accented vowels became long, and then the length was not
phonemic anymore.
> OI. bendacht 'blessing' > A. bennaeth or benna'ath (long a)
> - ch /X/ aspirates following plosive
> - voiceless aspirates fricativized (/th/>/T/)
> - vocalization of /X/ (as in Old English)
What do you mean by vocalisation? disappearance?
> - diphthongization of V (a>ae) OR lengthening of V (a>aa/a)
> which makes more sense in terms of treatment of that vowel?
Maybe lengthening of the vowel accompagning the disappearence of /X/...
and how come the
> finals weren't lost? Which derivation do you like more?
>
Simply because /X/ was still there when the rule of lost of final
consonnant applied, and this rule didn't apply when there was a
consonnant cluster.
> OI. scethach 'emetic' > A. syetha/sietha (same problem as above)
> -sc>sy/#_
> -loss of final C
> why no loss of final V?
>
Analogy? Or the /X/ disappeared making the vowel long, so the vowel
didn't disappear, and after another shortening of unaccented vowels
occurred.
> And one additional question : wouldn't this loss of finals cause an awful lot of
> monosyllabic and homonymous words?
>
Not all the words in Old Irish are dissyllabic I suppose. And also you
didn't take into account factors like analogy, creation of new words,
derivations that take place of the underived word, shifts in meanings,
etc... And a few homophones are not that bad! :) . You can have
appearance of epenthetic vowels for clarity also, or other things. Not
all changes are purely related to sound. I don't think sound change is
blind (that's to say, unaware of PoS and things like that). And of
course don't forget the powerful tool which is analogy.
> Any ideas are appreciated!!
>
Not that many ideas I'm afraid... I hope the ones I gave will help you.
> Clint
--
Christophe Grandsire
Philips Research Laboratories -- Building WB 145
Prof. Holstlaan 4
5656 AA Eindhoven
The Netherlands
Phone: +31-40-27-45006
E-mail: grandsir@natlab.research.philips.com