Hi everyone,
Ran asked me if I still had the sound changes lying around for my end of the Isles family... I had a quick look, and I do - so here're the sound changes that created Mûtsipsa'. I've written a little around them to make them easier to understand.
The original phoneme inventory
Stops /p, t, d, k, g, ʔ/
Affricates /ts dz/
Fricatives /s, ɦ/
Nasals /m, n/
Approximants /w, j/
Vowels: /i, a, u/
(While /ɦ/ is a voiced glottal fricative, I think I was (erroneously) using the symbol for the voiceless pharyngeal fricative.)
Depharyngealization
ɦu, ɦa > hu, ha
ɦi > xi
Tone-dependent lengthening or raising
i > i: / first vowel in HH word
u > u: / first vowel in HH word
a > e / first vowel in HH word
Semi-vowel and diphthong shifts
Code: Select all
a i u aj uj aw iw
wa wi wu waj wuj waw wiw
ja ji ju jaj juj jaw jiw
become:
a i u e û o y
o y uu we wû wo yy
e ii û e û jo iy
(The above is in Mûtsipsa' orthography, so û = /M/, and a doubled vowel indicates lengthening)
The above also only shows what happens to semi-vowel combinations and diphthongs with the old vowels. What about those vowels that arose because of HH conditions (e.g. /e/ and /i:/)? Well:
Code: Select all
e ii uu ej uuj ew iiw
we wii wuu wej wuuj wew wiiw
je jii juu jej juuj jew jiiw
become:
e ii uu ej ûû y yy
we wii wuu yj ûû yy yy
je jii juu ij ûû iy iy
Lenition
unvoiced plosive > unvoiced fricative / intervocalic
Fortition
VgV, VdV > VkV, VtV
(Actually, this could be seen as more of a chain shift than a lenition followed by a fortition, and I think it's how I originally imagined it.)
Denasalisation
VmV > VwV
m# > Ø#
Loss or centralisation or shortening of final vowels
i, y, u, û, a# > Ø#
e, o# > a#
long vowel# > short vowel#
Vowel syncope
#1V2V > #12V
(Where 1 is less sonorous than 2, and where V is any short vowel (e.g. kexa > kxa, sûjo > sjo).)
Devoicing
voiced plosives and aspirates devoice when adjacent to voiceless consonants
dz > ts
Hiatus resolution
VV > V'V
(Again, here we're using Mûtsipsa' orthography, the apostrophe represents the glottal stop.)
Glottal cluster simplification
'C > C
C'# > C#
Hapology
any exactly reduplicated syllables collapse together (e.g. tatani > tani, xixitswa > xitswa)
More glottal cluster simplification
Ch# > C#
(only on
roots, not suffixes)
So, some examples (in the old orthography, q is the glottal stop and acutes indicate high tone):
síkim húyqi huyqi hápaqi múmuytaq
becomes
siix hûûh hûh hefah muuwûsa'
háyqi múmuytziqya síqi tátatawsampawh
becomes
hej muuwûtsiha siih tsosampoh
As can be seen, tonal distinctions are neutralized. The difference between
húyqi and
huyqi, previously tonal, becomes one of vowel length.
If you have any questions, please ask, and I'll try and look it up or remember. I think there are a few inconsistencies, in that some words did not undergo particular sound changes, and some words had a few extra ones, but historical phonology is not a hard and fast science

The man of science is perceiving and endowed with vision whereas he who is ignorant and neglectful of this development is blind. The investigating mind is attentive, alive; the mind callous and indifferent is deaf and dead. - 'Abdu'l-Bahá