From: Jens Elmegaard Rasmussen
Message: 33304
Date: 2004-06-27
>But I haven't based anything on the assumption of a single vowel for (an
> > [] I am not using the one-vowel analysis for anything at all. I
> > only responded to a long series of lecturings about its self-evident
> > wrongness, statements that fly in the face of observations anyone
> > can make. Whether it is right or wrong is of no consequence for any
> > of the analyses concerning the growth of IE ablaut and morphological
> > peculiarities that I have presented.
>
> It's wrong not only because it's rare. It's wrong because it doesn't
> really address the features of IE in a straightforward way and has
> led you to other rarities that only add to the unlikeliness of your
> account.
> > Well, if they *did* that, that is what we should find out aboutWell, the truth just is the oppposite of that. I do not know what may have
> > them. Are we not after the truth? Now, it was not that way, and I'm
> > not saying that. The thematic vowel was created under the accent.
>
> Well, yes, I agree... in that the thematic vowel is _unstressed_ *a.
> It became reduced to [&] from MIE *e indeed because of the accent, yes.
> > The quest for the truth does not go by what you already know. ItBy you I meant you, sir. I cannot be content with departing from what you
> > should be pursued with an open mind.
>
> I'm sure you mean something else for we most certainly must begin with
> what we know to arrive at further answers. Otherwise, we're grappling
> in the dark unnecessarily.
> > That's not what I read about some of the Semitic languages. But ifNo, you are twisting everything around. You always do that. It is very
> > it's correct and vowel oppositions are really *lexical* and not
> > merely morphologically conditioned as I can read, the prestage of IE
> > we're talking about is not quite like Semitic.
>
> I don't understand why you'd insist otherwise. Semitic and IE are
> seperate language groups anyways and you're assuming that they must be
> the same?
> I don't get where you're going with this. Nonetheless,I was not referring to anything in Akkadian. But do you have to scrape fpr
> everything I've said so far still stands and you haven't raised any
> noteworthy points. I guess you're saying that since Proto-Semitic,
> say, shows *CaCa:C- in one form and *CaCiC- in another, therefore
> Semitic doesn't have varied vocalism and, yes, as it's currently
> formulated, the language appears to have no irregularities... that's
> why it's suspect. Even Akkadian had irregularities like /illik/ so
> yet again, the "varied vocalism" stance wins the debate.
>Yacketiyack: It's a commonly used short way of saying the unaccented form
>
> > You do not know every stage.
>
> Neither do you. It's our goal in common, no?
>
>
> > No, I am not understanding your position. I refuse to consider
> > Etruscan evidence here, it's putting the cart before the horse.
>
> None of this really depends on Tyrrhenian, anyway, so it's of no
> concern whether you reject it. However, it's unfortunate because you're
> losing out on some details.
>
>
> > I can explain most of the IE vowel alternations by rules working after
> > the rise of zero-grade.
>
> In my account, there are ablaut patterns occurring both before and after
> Syncope. That is more balanced than saying that everything is recent.
>
>
> > The weakening of unaccented /e/ to /o/ [...]
>
> Again, no language I know of "weakens" /e/ to /o/.
> with this proto-Klingon of yours. Normally a vowel will lower orBut you should. There should be a new name each time there has been a
> deperipheralize to schwa when unstressed, not _add_ new features like
> rounding! This statement in itself is absurd, not to mention the
> rest of your ideas related to the change of thematic vowel through
> magic tonal qualities that again round *o for no rational reason. As
> I said, some of your analyses and bases make sense in themselves but
> what you do with them afterwards is frightening.
>
>
> > What is the charm about maximum similarity between "durative"
> > and "perfect"?
>
> That's the goal. To take unintuitive structures in a language and
> figure out what simpler origins they come from. Even the universe
> as it now stands arose from minute fluctuations in an otherwise
> monotonously uniform sea of particles. If you disagree, write a
> letter to your local quantum physicist.
>
>
> > Because of the unknown time frame you could be right,
> > but it does not seem knowable. I deem it very unwise to design names
> > for these stages, for we will need hundreds of names,
>
> Do I use "hundreds of names"? No. An exaggeration.
> I use three simpleNo, the full picture of its forms points very definitely to its having
> names: Old IE, Mid IE and Late IE which I had originally thought were
> about a thousand years each. Granted I split it further into eLIE
> and lMIE perhaps but only to show that if Syncope marks the beginning
> of the Late Period then what I'm saying occurred just after or before
> such a time. However, it's turning out that Old IE is probably more like
> five hundred years and that IndoTyrrhenian may have fully split up more
> around 6000 BCE than 7000 BCE. The timeframes of the nomenclature I
> use may change but are really dependent on major _language-based_ events
> such as Syncope for MIE=>LIE and QAR for OIE=>MIE.
>
>
> > and they will be changing all the time as we work on the finer tuning.
>
> That's a given that is already understood without further elaboration.
>
>
> > Therefore I have simply presented my phonetic rules in linear order
> > without prejudice about their age in absolute values.
>
> I have no prejudice either here. The timeframes are estimations at
> best and may change in the future when I learn more. We don't differ
> here really.
>
>
> > The form *woid-xe is not normative for IE morphology at all. Rules
> > based on it cannot be very good.
>
> Do you mean here that *woid-, being unreduplicated, is not "normative"
> compared to other perfects? Is that it? It really doesn't matter in
> my analysis one way or another but the evidence shows that the verb
> stem really isn't reduplicated.
> > The infix is not of phonotactic origin. Like most other things it isThere is much more solid evidence showing exactly what you refuse to even
> > sensitive to phonotactic factors in its further development, but
> > that is a completely different matter.
>
> Here we go again. It's "not of phonotactic origin", but what is the
> _evidence_ in one short paragraph? These are still idle assertions.
> > There is no constraint excluding a sequence of three consonants acrossThere is no rule complying with this brand of common sense as you term it.
> > a stem + flexive boundary.
>
> We've gone over this. When this does occur, it can be shown that it
> is not an ancient state of affairs. A word like *bHe:rst is quite a
> heavy syllable indeed but it's already been shown that *-t is an eLIE
> demonstrative ending related to *to- and that the *s-aorist verb stem
> *bHe:rs- is an MIE innovation, being nothing but a denominal *s-stem
> in the end which had lengthened the root vowel because of the irregular
> 'clipping' of the monosyllabic *-es morpheme during Syncope. When you
> look deeper, the phonotactics are different in eLIE than they are in
> PIE itself. That's just common sense anyways.
>No, it's a case story. Therfore it is not very wise to depart from that
> > It is completely contrary to the rest of IE morphology to have a
> > thematic vowel follow a desinence. It is also contrary to IE
> > phonology to have a thematic vowel leave the placing of the accent
> > unaffected.
>
> Since you're expecting all the rules of IE to apply to Pre-IE, I
> evidently can't reason with you.
>
>
> > The irregular forms of the root *weyd- can be derived from normal
> > *we-wóyd-/*wé- wid- by dissimilation (haplology) giving *wóyd-/*wéyd-.
>
> A lie. This "dissimilation" is completely ad hoc and isn't based on
> any regular rule I know of.
> > If retention of the vowel in the 1sg of the perfect in *-H2e isThat was my horrible impression of the general pattern of all cases you
> > regular, why is the vowel lost in the middle voice which has accented
> > *-H2é vs. unaccented *-&2?
>
> I've already mentioned that the middle as a special conjugation doesn't
> go farther back than eLIE. The middle endings are adapted from perfect
> endings and there are various forms in different dialects.
>
>
> > Why is the paradigm of *weid- which "has no problems" not followed by
> > other examples?
>
> What are you talking about? It's the _general_ pattern that works in all
> the cases I can think of.
>Your terminology is not everybody's. Not that I care much, but for
>
> > But these are differences you put in without motivation,
>
> The motivation is QAR and phonotactics.
>The subjunctive of the perfect of *weid- turns up with irregular but
> > And how do you account for the existence of a perfect subjunctive?
>
> It's an innovation. The subjunctive was originally unmarked for aspect.
> >>> Narten presents are made form the *same* roots that have
> >>> underlying short *e in other forms. It is a purely morphological
> >>> matter.
> >>
> >> A morphological matter based on what exactly?
> >
> > Strange question, how could anyone know?
>
> If you can't respond to an issue you bring up, don't bring it up then.
> My take on Nartens are that they are denominals. I know that IE
> later used *-ye- or *-ske- for that purpose but I don't think that
> explicit marking was originally the case and bare nouns could be used
> as verbs. Nartens would be one evidence of this. S-aorists another
> which are lengthened in the first place because of the Szemerenyi
> effect of 'clipping' as with other select morphemes I've already
> mentioned.
>
>
> > You apparently won't accept that the lopsidedness has a causation to
> > it at all.
>
> How can I? The "lopsidedness" is merely a tendency but not absolute
> or even close. My theory explains it, as I've said, since the cummulative
> sound changes I propose will cause such an effect without the need
> for monovocalism which hasn't been adequately proven by you anyway. At
> best, you've shown similarity with Sanskrit but there are still
> unexplained differences such as the verbs with *a-vocalism that you
> don't have an explanation for. You say I dismiss them. I am simply
> forced to by your lack of adequate evidence.
>
>
> > Well, then that item may be out. Are you insensitive to the very
> > thought that you could be right and your explanations could do away
> > with the entire recalcitrant material?
>
> I simply showed the possibility in this particular case. It doesn't
> explain every stem and there does seem to be a pattern of *a for
> *o neighbouring labialized consonants.
>
>
> > It is not natural anyways that very few roots have *a, if all others
> > have it otherways.
>
> You're speaking of "accented *a" really in the latest stage of IE though
> which makes it kind of crazy. If you look at it through my eyes, you'll
> see that the thematic vowel is original unaccented *a and that accented
> *o was accented *a, so there are a whole slew of *a's both accented
> and unaccented that once existed. We then have here a very natural
> language replete with *a. If a recent Vowel Shift obliterates this
> pattern by changing *a to *o in most positions, if *a was even originally
> the vowel of choice in non-durative stems, and if original *a comes
> to be more common in unaccented position because of lengthening before
> voiced segments, naturally it will look "lopsided" as we find it. This
> is not evidence and can be explained with resorting to anti-universal
> theories.
>
>
> > The alleged *o-verbs do not have a special *lexical* vocalism.
>
> ... Except for those attested in Anatolian which you deny.
>
>
> > And why on earth is it called an aorist?
>
> I won't insist on it because I'm basing that idea on extrapolation.
> The durative vocalism is clearly *-e-, but we find *-o- in the
> perfect. If the aorist originally used the same endings as the
> durative, could have had a perfect vocalism? I think so. This makes
> sense grammatically since the aorist is a kind of intermediate
> between the other two aspects and would be parallel to the development
> of the feminine later on which also appears to be treated as an
> intermediate between animate (becoming masculine) and inanimate
> (becoming neuter). In the case of the durative-aorist-perfect system
> which must have developped in IndoTyrrhenian already, the ancestor
> of it would be a subjective-objective system (with the perfect
> continuing the subjective).
>
>
> > Well, if you now choose to use the term thematic only about vowels
> > nobody else would call by that name, you could end up being right
> > (and incomprehensible). But yes, the suffix of the subjunctive was
> > originally accented in my view as well.
>
> One more notch. One day, we might be completely in agreement and
> that's when the meteor will come <:)
>
>
> > But if the different vowels are restricted to different positions,
> > they do not contrast.
>
> But they aren't restricted to different positions. Even in IE itself,
> *e and *o are free to occur in both accented and unaccented position,
> and in any syllable. The restriction is imaginary in the end. The
> predominance of *e in the default form of the verb stem doesn't
> translate into a phonological restriction. There isn't even a
> restriction existent in the ablaut. We have accented *e alternating
> with unaccented *o and even vice versa! What restriction? Seems like
> another simulacrum on your part.
>
>
> > However, that is not what I mean. The thematic root-present type is
> > very plainly a transfer from the subjunctive, mainly the aorist
> > subjunctive. It's a well-known observable and ongoing process which
> > is repeated by younger material in the individual languages.
>
> Not that "plainly". Evidently your idea is dependent on the antiquity
> of the aorist subjunctive which I don't accept. The subjunctive was
> originally unspecific to aspect, I figure.
>
>
> = gLeN
>
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