Yeah, good idea.
On that note, I’m wondering if it might be a good idea to allow grouping sound changes? Since at the moment the two changes *ɡʷ→*ɡ and *ɡ→*j are treated separately, yet they do belong to a single chain shift.
Yeah, good idea.
Clearly marking chain shifts as such is probably a good idea.
So the question then is: what would be the best approach for doing so?Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Nov 27, 2023 8:05 pmClearly marking chain shifts as such is probably a good idea.
Marking them as, say, *a → *b → *c in contrast to *a → *b and *b → *c, which would stand for two separate changes occurring one after another (equivalent to *a → *c and *b → *c from the endpoint POV).
Yeah, of course that’s the obvious approach, now that you mention it!
Hold on… on reflection, this seems confused. A chain shift would surely be *b→*c then *a→*b, right? *a→*b→*c is simply an ordinary sound change with an intermediate step, so not a chain shift at all.
On p182 he specifies that ‘square brackets (“[ ]”) are used to indicate a form that is not cognate’, and indeed /e/ in Table 21 is in square brackets, so I presume this actually isn’t a real sound change (but *ʉ→*ɵ is).
I believe this can be refined: *b→w only when the following vowel is not nasalised, while *b→p competes with both pathways.*b → w, p (for reflex w only, "innovatio[n] borrowed from Vanimo")
*b → m /_V[+nasal] ("innovatio[n] borrowed from Vanimo")
I can’t find this in the paper. Rather, Table 26 suggests non-nasalised *ɵ→ɵ.*ɵ̃ → ũ
*ɵ → i (otherwise)
Thanks, you're right in all cases. I should check more carefully.bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Mar 18, 2024 9:46 pm I finally got around to transcribing a few more of these sound changes (to Sangke, Wutung and Proto-Vanimo). But now I have some queries:
On p182 he specifies that ‘square brackets (“[ ]”) are used to indicate a form that is not cognate’, and indeed /e/ in Table 21 is in square brackets, so I presume this actually isn’t a real sound change (but *ʉ→*ɵ is).
I believe this can be refined: *b→w only when the following vowel is not nasalised, while *b→p competes with both pathways.*b → w, p (for reflex w only, "innovatio[n] borrowed from Vanimo")
*b → m /_V[+nasal] ("innovatio[n] borrowed from Vanimo")
I can’t find this in the paper. Rather, Table 26 suggests non-nasalised *ɵ→ɵ.*ɵ̃ → ũ
*ɵ → i (otherwise)
The issue for the first change here is that he actually gives quite a different chronology:
So it would seem that he’s actually suggesting *ɡʷ→*ɡ→*j in Proto-West Coast, then *j→tʃ in Proto-Border. And, in fact, we’ve already transcribed these sound changes as such! So it seems like there’s no need for *gʷ→tʃ in Sangke specifically.Donohue wrote: The loss of the *j triggered a move to replace the palatals, and so *gʷ shifted to become a palatal stop, **j.16 This change spread through the Proto–West Coast community, and simplified to tʃ in Proto-Border.
16. The other high voiced stop, *g, had already been lost by this time; it is likely that the Proto–West Coast *gʷ phoneme had first lost its rounding—see 5.1.4.