Classical Doccábh: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 14:15, 12 February 2024
Classical Doccábh | |
---|---|
doccáib dirr | |
Pronunciation | [do.ˈka:βʲ dʲi.r̩ʲ] |
Region | Originally in northern Yazland, and the zone of influence of the Doccábhan Empire. |
Ethnicity | Doccábh |
Era | fl. 2200CY |
Yasgan
| |
Early form | |
Range of the Doccábhan Empire, under which Classical Doccábh was the official language |
Classical Doccábh (doccáib dirr [do.ˈka:βʲ dʲi.r̩ʲ]) was a language spoken in northern Yazland, originally by the Doccábh people, and later by multiple groups under the Doccábhan Empire. Today it largely survives as a language for international communication, as well as science and academia, although it is largely being supplanted. Despite this, few to no native speakers of the language exist.
Before the fall of the Doccábhan Empire, it had largely evolved into colloquial forms spoken across the various provinces of the empire, which later evolved into different modern languages. These are largely minority languages today, although some countries in the Gintem Confederation use them as an official language. Classical Doccábh itself is still common in literature and institutions, and is standardised by TODO.
Classical Doccábh had a large effect on the languages around it, with many words being borrowed into the surrounding Yasgan, Ashno-Verethian, and Milevic languages, especially in the areas of law, science, theology, and medicine, as well as many placenames.
Classification
Classical Doccábh developed from Archaic Doccábh, especially the northern and eastern dialects, making it a part of the Greater Doccábhan language family and thereby a member of the Yasgan language family.
History
Geographical distribution
Dialects
Phonology
Consonants
Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Velar | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | labial | |||||
Plosive | voiced | b | d | ɡ | ɡʷ | |
voiceless | t | k | kʷ | |||
Fricative | voiced | (β~v) | (ð) | (z) | (ɣ) | (ɣʷ) |
voiceless | f | (θ) | s | (x) | (xʷ) | |
Nasal | m | n | (ŋ) | (ŋʷ) | ||
Rhotic | r |
All consonants could also have palatalisation applied to them in any position, although this palatalisation spread throughout clusters.
Lenition
Some consonants were lenited after vowels:
Plain | Lenited |
---|---|
t | θ |
k | x |
kʷ | xʷ |
b | β~v |
d | ð |
g | ɣ |
gʷ | ɣʷ |
s | z |
This also applied to palatalised consonants.
Tense and lax sonorants
The consonants /m n r/ could be either tense or lax. Lax sonorants were generally pronounced as plain sonorants, but could have a softer pronunciation after vowels, similar to lenited consonants. Tense sonorants were generally pronounced closer to a geminate, and could be found only medially and finally; finally, they were usually realised as a syllabic consonant, but other dialects might still use the geminate pronunciation. The tense sonorants were usually doubled in spelling - e.g. mm, nn, rr.
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | iː i | u uː | |
Close-mid | eː e | (ə) | o oː |
Open-mid | ɛ: ɛ | ɔ ɔː | |
Open | a aː |
The existence of [ə] is disputed and unclear.
The open-mid vowels were rare, especially /ɛ ɛ:/. They were usually spelled with ei and ao, with long variants éi and áo.
Orthography
Classical Doccábh was written in Doccábh script, an alphabet which originated from the Rausin alphabet.