Re: gl > gr attested in Romance?
From: | Benct Philip Jonsson <conlang@...> |
Date: | Friday, February 23, 2007, 14:37 |
Henrik Theiling skrev:
> Hi!
>
> Is the sound shift /gl/ > /gr/ and/or /kl/ > /kr/ attested
> in Romance?
>
> Or at least, would you think it's feasible like the /bl/ >
> /br/ in pt. 'branco' < BLANCU(M)?
I don't know if it is attested, but it seems plausuble
enough. IIRC there are/were not many words with GL in Latin
to begin with.
Is, BTW _branco_ an isolated example? I think not.
> I am thinking about 'grorie' < GLORIA(M) in a new toy
> romlang I started yesterday.
Why not? Although in this particular word I'd expect the
presence of an _r_ later in the word to inhibit the change,
or if the lang totally eschews _Cl_ clusters to yield
_grolie_, since remote dissimilation between liquids is
quite common in Latin and Romance. Meyer-Lübke's
Einführung lists a number of instances, but I don't have it
by me ATM. AFMOC Rhodrese regularly has D > r / V_V, -- e.g.
FIDES > _fair_ -- except when there is already an R in the
word, in which case D > l, e.g. PRUDENTEM > _prulent_.
Another exception is where D comes to stand before a
sonorant: CREDERE > _craidre_. It also draws some original
Rs with it, e.g. MERCURI DIE > _melcordi_. I still don't
know what to do with CRUDELEM, but since CRUDUS > _crul_
probably is in the language _crulair_ is thinkable.
> Also, what about /Nn/ > /Ngr/ like /mn/ > /mbr/ (sp.
> 'nombre' < NOM(I)NE(M))?
>
> Tere, I'm thinking of 'ringre' < RE:GNU(M).
The only snag is that [Nn] for _gn_ is AFAIK unattested in
Romance, which IIANM has /J/ or /nn/ > /n/, in all the
relevand words, e.g. Old French _renne_. But wait, Rumanian
has LIGNU > _lemn_, and I guess all of /J/, /n(n)/, /mn/ may
be derivable from [Nn] if one wants to.
FWIW Rhodrese also has Cn > Cr -- which BTW is attested in
the form _Rhodray_ itself, which also shows that D > r is
posterior to syncope!