Tlaliolz is located close enough to both Ngauro and Faraghin territory that it could easily have borrowed some words from there, independent of NT. Actually, I'd expect to see a rather significant portion of Faraghin loans in Tlaliolz as these people seem to have shared a fairly similar (and adjacent) habitat.Corumayas wrote:I see you've got teak 'chief', which looks cognate to NT diàka. I've been working with the assumption that diàka is a loan from Ngauro, cognate with Faraghin čark; but I think the same root shows up in Proto-Xoronic too. Should I drop that correspondence, or is it still possible that this word was borrowed (either into Proto-Macro-Edastean or separately into all three langs) during the Ngauro's heyday?
The real problem is Proto-Xoronic, which has *əhtanqa "chief, headman". This looks like a clear cognate to diàka, which in turn, if it derived from Proto-Talo-Edastean, would have to come from something like **(V)diaɴqa. I would also like to keep this word as a term from Ngauro originally, so think our best option is to ascribe at least the PX version to an early borrowing from those Miwan/Meshi speakers who migrated up the Aiwa around -3000. Given the currently reconstructed PEI root *trelk(a), which should be something like **trilk(a) in Proto-Miwan, this is problematic though. Maybe the Meshi aspirated initial *tr, backed *k to [q] before *a, which in turn could lead to lowering of the vowel in the main root syllable, and nasalized coda *l (a change that is present in some Habeo varieties a few millennia later), so we could get Old Meshi **thaɴqa. But even that is still a bit of a stretch if we keep assuming that the Meshi dialect of this time should have been very close to Proto-Miwan. Well... any ideas?
EDIT:
The reflex of PX *əhtanqa in Proto-Habeo (c. -1000 YP) is *a:tenqe, which might be easier to get from Miwan/Meshi. By that time though, the peoples of the Xōron have already had their first attempts at empire-building, which should postdate the loan.



