That could work. It could happen in just a few changes, too. How about kt > ks > s?meltman wrote:A) kt>s ?
Hanoi Vietnamese had kr > kʂ > ʂ > s, which is a similar overall change.
That could work. It could happen in just a few changes, too. How about kt > ks > s?meltman wrote:A) kt>s ?

I see no problems with that.meltman wrote:^^Wow, really? Could kt>xt>s also work? I don't know which I prefer.
What about kt > th > ts > s ?WeepingElf wrote:I see no problems with that.meltman wrote:^^Wow, really? Could kt>xt>s also work? I don't know which I prefer.

Aiďos wrote:Is /d/ > /ð/ [ð̞ˤ] > /ʕ/ > vowel retraction plausible? I was thinking that for a descendant of Dŕbatkovi I could have /d/ and syllable-final /t/ and /θ/ pharyngealize and cause all kinds of damage on the surrounding vowels, to eventually have a 3-vowel system with length and an overload of glottal stops in the daughterlang...


The details are that syllable final plosives are already lenited, so the /t~θ/ distinction is already neutralized in that environment and only surfaces in morphological forms where the consonant occurs before a vowel. Then, /θ/ and /ð/ pharyngealize to maximize contrast with /s z/. After that, /θ/ voices unconditionally, and the resulting [ð̞ˤ] debuccalizes into [ʕ]. The vowel system at this stage of the language is /aː ɛi e iː ɔu o uː/, and the front vowels centralize adjacent to /ʕ/: [ʕɒː ʕɜɨ ʕɘ ʕɨː, ɜɨʕ ɘʕ ɨʕ]. A few hundred years later, the pharyngeal is lost, and the central vowels are phonemes in their own right. Then, the vowel sequences develop into a rather irregular diphthong system (which I have yet to derive), which then simplifies into a Sanskrit-like /aː ə eː ɪ iː oː ʊ uː aɛ əu/, with glottal stops breaking up the remaining hiatuses.ná'oolkiłí wrote:I don't think d > ð > ʕ is too weird. In one of my langs I have *d > ʕ: *d lenites to *ð and then merges with *ɣ, which has an allophone of [ʕ] before back vowels; vowels then move around to make /ʕ/. I kinda find it weird that *t and *θ become pharyngeal(ized), though. What are the exact details you're envisioning? Is it to make them more contrastive with another coronal series or something?



Maybe including a nasalization as a middle step?Lyra wrote:Is this feasible?
ʔ/ŋ/_#
~Lyra
The sequences for original aspirated and voiceless stops followed by *r definitely make sense, not just individually but also as a system.sangi39 wrote:Would these changes make sense between vowels?
pʰr > ɸr > hr > r˳ > r
pr > br > br > :br > :r
br > βr > βʙ > β˕: > v:
tʰr > θr > hr > r˳ > r
tr > dr > dr > :dr > :r
dr > ðr > ðr > ɹ: > r:
kʰr > xr > hr > r˳ > r
kr > gr > gr > :gr > :r
gr > ɣr > ɣʀ > ɰ: > j:
I've seen at least one natlang example of ʔ > ŋ syllable-final, but conditioned by a following consonant. This doesn't sound too weird to me though, depending on what other finals are like.Lyra wrote:Is this feasible?
ʔ/ŋ/_#
~Lyra
I've had ɹj > rj > r in one conlang. The [ɹ] turned into [r] directly to contrast more with [j] because they were both approximants.Esmelthien wrote:Does ɹj > ɻj > ɽʲ > ɽ > ɾ > r make sense?


Some ideas:GrinningManiac wrote:I'm working on a Lang that I want to have descended from Hindi but have a particular sound.
The Lang would distinguish sounds down Voiced, Unvoiced and Aspirated. Thus:
G K Kh
There are also labalised (gw/kw/khw) and palatalised (gj/kj/khj) distinctions
Hindi however does not have labalised or palatalised consonants and it also has Retroflex and Dental stops (t,th,d,dh) whereas I only retain the dental. Hindi also has aspirated voiced consonants and two vowel lengths. I lose the voiced aspirates and gain a third extra-long length which is distinguished with a slight tone along the lines of Mandarin's third tone.
What sound changes do you think would have occurred to make any or all of these things occur?
The first step— palatalization into a retroflex — seems odd; a typical feature of retroflexes is that they resist the effects of palatalization.Esmelthien wrote:Does ɹj > ɻj > ɽʲ > ɽ > ɾ > r make sense?
Do you also have s > χ and k > q elsewhere before back vowels? Would seem unexpected if not, but even in that case something like this would work:Esmelthien wrote:And ks > q͡χ / __(back vowels) ?
Hmmm, got some stuff to think about there...cedh audmanh wrote: The sequences for original aspirated and voiceless stops followed by *r definitely make sense, not just individually but also as a system.
I'm not fully convinced by the sequences for the clusters with original voiced stops though: [ɣr] > [ɣʀ] and [ɹː] > [rː] are unusual but possible (but of course you don't need a special justification for [dr] > [rː], only perhaps for keeping this [rː] distinct when you also have a later [dr] > [ːr] change), and [βr] > [βʙ] is extremely unlikely IMO, firstly because [ʙ] itself is already very rare, and secondly because the sequence [βʙ] in particular is quite difficult to pronounce (while still strange, [bʙ] would be a much more likely intermediate - but of course that can eventually go to [vː] too). My biggest problem here is not with any individual shift though, but with the system: these changes are not at all parallel to those of clusters with a voiceless or aspirated stop, so they're unlikely to happen in the same language. A more plausible way to get *br *gr > [vː jː] might be [br ɡr] > [bð ɡð] > [bv ɡj] > [vː jː].
I don't know if this kind of syllabification can actually have any bearing on future sound changes or not.Wikipedia wrote:Most commonly, a single consonant between vowels is grouped with the following syllable (i.e. /CV.CV/), while two consonants between vowels are split between syllables (i.e. /CVC.CV/). In some languages, however, such as Old Church Slavonic, any group of consonants that can occur at the beginning of a word is grouped with the following syllable; hence, a word such as pazdva would be syllabified /pa.zdva/.