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Proto-Finnic or Proto-Baltic-Finnic is the common ancestor of the
Finnic languages The Finnic (''Fennic'') or more precisely Balto-Finnic (Balto-Fennic, Baltic Finnic, Baltic Fennic) languages constitute a branch of the Uralic language family spoken around the Baltic Sea by the Baltic Finnic peoples. There are around 7  ...
, which include the national languages
Finnish Finnish may refer to: * Something or someone from, or related to Finland * Culture of Finland * Finnish people or Finns, the primary ethnic group in Finland * Finnish language, the national language of the Finnish people * Finnish cuisine See also ...
and
Estonian Estonian may refer to: * Something of, from, or related to Estonia, a country in the Baltic region in northern Europe * Estonians, people from Estonia, or of Estonian descent * Estonian language * Estonian cuisine * Estonian culture See also * ...
. Proto-Finnic is not attested in any texts, but has been reconstructed by linguists. Proto-Finnic is itself descended ultimately from
Proto-Uralic Proto-Uralic is the unattested reconstructed language ancestral to the modern Uralic language family. The hypothetical language is believed to have been originally spoken in a small area in about 7000–2000 BCE, and expanded to give differenti ...
.


Background

Three stages of Proto-Finnic are distinguished in literature. * Early Proto-Finnic, the last common ancestor of the Finnic languages and its closest external relatives — usually understood to be the
Sami languages Acronyms * SAMI, ''Synchronized Accessible Media Interchange'', a closed-captioning format developed by Microsoft * Saudi Arabian Military Industries, a government-owned defence company * South African Malaria Initiative, a virtual expertise ...
, though also the
Mordvinic languages The Mordvinic languages, also known as the Mordvin, Mordovian or Mordvinian languages (russian: мордовские языки, ''mordovskiye yazyki''), are a subgroup of the Uralic languages, comprising the closely related Erzya language and Mok ...
may derive from this stage (see
Finno-Samic languages The Finno-Samic languages (also known as ''Finno-Saamic'', ''Finno-Lappic'', ''Fenno-Saamic'', or ''Saamic–Fennic'') are a hypothetical subgroup of the Uralic family, and are made up of 22 languages classified into either the Sami languages, wh ...
). This reconstruction state appears to be almost identical to Proto-Uralic. * Middle Proto-Finnic, an earlier stage in the development on Finnic, used in Kallio (2007) for the point at which the language had developed its most characteristic differences from
Proto-Uralic Proto-Uralic is the unattested reconstructed language ancestral to the modern Uralic language family. The hypothetical language is believed to have been originally spoken in a small area in about 7000–2000 BCE, and expanded to give differenti ...
(mainly: the loss of several consonant phonemes from the segment inventory, including all palatalized consonants). * Late Proto-Finnic, the last common ancestor of Finnish and Estonian, and hence of the
Gulf of Finland The Gulf of Finland ( fi, Suomenlahti; et, Soome laht; rus, Фи́нский зали́в, r=Finskiy zaliv, p=ˈfʲinskʲɪj zɐˈlʲif; sv, Finska viken) is the easternmost arm of the Baltic Sea. It extends between Finland to the north and ...
Finnic subgroup.
South Estonian South Estonian, spoken in south-eastern Estonia, encompasses the Tartu, Mulgi, Võro and Seto varieties. There is no academic consensus on its status, as some linguists consider South Estonian a dialect group of Estonian whereas other linguist ...
and the
Livonian language The Livonian language ( liv, līvõ kēļ, link=no or ; et, liivi keel, link=yes) is a Finnic language whose native land is the Livonian Coast of the Gulf of Livonia, located in the north of the Kurzeme peninsula in Latvia. Although its last ...
had already diverged at this point.


Era and region

Views on when and where Proto-Finnic was spoken have varied over the years. Many of the older sources do not recognize Middle Proto-Finnic, recognizing only Early and Late Proto-Finnic: Proto-Finnic is thought to have been spoken around the
Gulf of Finland The Gulf of Finland ( fi, Suomenlahti; et, Soome laht; rus, Фи́нский зали́в, r=Finskiy zaliv, p=ˈfʲinskʲɪj zɐˈlʲif; sv, Finska viken) is the easternmost arm of the Baltic Sea. It extends between Finland to the north and ...
, but theories on its earlier location have varied; traditionally it has been considered that Proto-Finnic arrived first on the eastern coast of the Gulf of Finland, but it has also been suggested that Middle Proto-Finnic was spoken in an area in modern-day
Estonia Estonia, formally the Republic of Estonia, is a country by the Baltic Sea in Northern Europe. It is bordered to the north by the Gulf of Finland across from Finland, to the west by the sea across from Sweden, to the south by Latvia, an ...
and northeastern parts of
Latvia Latvia ( or ; lv, Latvija ; ltg, Latveja; liv, Leţmō), officially the Republic of Latvia ( lv, Latvijas Republika, links=no, ltg, Latvejas Republika, links=no, liv, Leţmō Vabāmō, links=no), is a country in the Baltic region of ...
.


Changes up to Late Proto-Finnic

* ''*ï'' > ''*a''. This change is shared by several other western Uralic languages, including the Sami and Mordvinic languages. * ''*ä...ä'' > ''*a...e''. * Word-initial deaffrication: ** ''*č'' > ''*š''. ** ''*ć'' > ''*ś''. * ''*ŋ'' and ''*x'' are lost as phonemes. Between vowels they are usually lost entirely, triggering lengthening of a preceding vowel. ** In certain cases, this may have proceeded through vocalization to ''*w''. Compare e.g. PU ''*mexi-'' > PF ''*möö-'' "to sell"; PU ''*sewi-'' > PF ''*söö-'' "to eat". ** Before dental/alveolar consonants, both consonants usually vocalize to ''*w''. ** The cluster ''*ŋk'' remains, but ''*ŋ'' in this case is now simply an allophone of ''*n'' rather than an independent phoneme. * Depalatalisation: ** ''*ć'' > ''*c''. ** ''*ś'' > ''*s''. ** ''*δ́'' > ''*δ''. ** ''*ń'' > ''*n''. ** ''*ĺ'' > ''*l''. * Lengthening of open vowels: ** ''*a'' > ''*oo'' (including former ''*ï'') and ''*ä'' > ''*ee'', when the vowels appear **# in an open syllable, and **# followed by a non-semivowel sonorant consonant (*m, *n, *l, *r, *δ), and **# followed by an original non-open vowel *i (also denoted *ə, *e). ** E.g.: PU ''*ńäli-'' > PF ''*ńeele-'' "to swallow"; PU ''*ńëli'' > PF ''*nooli'' "arrow" * ''*δ'' > ''*t''. * Sequences of a vowel and syllable-final semivowel ''*j'' or ''*w'' are reinterpreted as diphthongs: ''*aj'' > ''*ai'', ''*aw'' > ''*au'' etc. Consequently, these consonants can no longer close a syllable (relevant for consonant gradation). Any diphthongs ending in ''*u'' become subject to vowel harmony and split into ''*u'' and ''*ü'' accordingly. ** In some cases, there remained alternations between the consonantal and vocalic form, e.g. in ''*käüdäk'' "to walk" ~ ''*kävi'' "walked" (Finnish ''käydä'' ~ ''kävi''). * Monophthongisation of some diphthongs in non-initial syllables: ** ''*au'' > ''*o'' ** ''*ei'' > ''*i'' ** ''*eu'' > ''*u'', ''*eü'' > ''*ü'' * Word-final ''*-e'' becomes ''*-i''. * ''*ti'' is assibilated to ''*ci''. ** The change was blocked if another coronal obstruent preceded, i.e. ''*tti'', ''*cti'', ''*sti'', ''*šti'' (thus Finnish ''kaksi'' "two" ~ ''kahden'' < Pre-Proto-Finnic ''*kakti'', but ''lehti'' "leaf" ~ ''lehden'' < ''*lešti''). ** The change was fed by ''*ei'' > ''*i'', which also caused assibilation. * Apocope of final ''*-i'' when at least two syllables preceded. This occurred after assibilation, which created alternations between final ''*-c'' and medial ''*-t-'' in some nouns (e.g. Finnish nouns in ''-us'', genitive ''-uden'', essive ''-utena''). * Syncope/contraction of medial ''*-e-'' between ''*c'', ''*l'', ''*n'', ''*r'', ''*s'', ''*š'', ''*t'' and a following ''*k'', ''*n'' or ''*t''. Syncope was prevented if more than one consonant followed the ''*-e-''. If more than one consonant preceded, consonant clusters were often simplified by dropping the first member of the cluster. ** Examples of syncope before ''*t'' are widespread, owing to the many endings beginning with this consonant, including the partitive singular, genitive plural, infinitive and various passive forms. Finnish examples are ''vesi'' "water", partitive ''vettä'' (< ''*vetetä''), ''lohi'' "salmon", partitive ''lohta'' (< ''*lošeta''), ''purra'' "to bite" (< ''*purdak'' < ''*puretak''). ** Syncope before ''*n'' was also regular, but there were fewer environments in which it could occur. It occurred most notably in the potential mood and the past active participle of verbs. Many of the clusters ending in ''*n'' were later simplified by assimilation, either by assimilating the ''*n'' to the preceding consonant, or in some cases the reverse. Finnish examples are ''purren'', ''purrut'' (forms of ''purra'' "bite"; < ''*purnen'', ''*purnut'' < ''*purenen'', ''*purenut''), ''pessen'', ''pessyt'' (forms of ''pestä'' "to wash", < ''*pesnen'', ''*pesnüt'' < ''*pesenen'', ''*pesenüt''). Contraction also occurred in the essive singular of nominals, but these forms were often restored analogically. Finnish still possesses a few obsolete or fossilised cases of contracted essives, e.g. ''toissa'' "on the second-last (time)" (< ''*toicna'' < ''*toicena''), a fossilised essive form of ''toinen'' "second". ** Syncope before ''*k'' was regular but there were few environments in which it could occur. It is seen primarily in imperative forms of verbs, which are formed with a ''-k-'' suffix. Finnish examples are ''olkaa'' (imperative of ''olla'' "be"; < ''*olkade'' < ''*volekate''), ''maatkaa'' (forms of ''maata'' "lie down"; < ''*magatkate'' < ''*makatekate''). ** Syncope also occurred between ''*m'' and ''*t'' in several cases, giving ''*-nt-''. This occurred perhaps in all cases, but it was reverted later in many cases. An example in Finnish is ''lumi'' "snow", partitive ''lunta'' (< Pre-Proto-Finnic ''*lumeta''). Older Finnish had more examples of this, which were later restored by analogy. ** Two words show the contraction ''*-ket-'' > ''*-kt-'': ''*näktäk'' "to see" < ''*näketäk'' (Finnish ''nähdä'') and ''*tektäk'' "to do" < ''*teketäk'' (Finnish ''tehdä''). * Application of radical gradation in closed syllables, causing voicing of short obstruents and shortening of geminate stops. This occurred after apocope, or was still productive at the time, as the newly consonant-final syllables resulting from apocope triggered gradation as well. * ''*š'' > ''*h'' ** The clusters ''*tš'' and ''*kš'' lose their first component to also become simple ''*h''. * ''*č'' > ''*t'', but ''*čk'' develops differently in South Estonian, see below. * In non-initial syllables, low-vowel i-diphthongs are raised: ** ''*äi'' > ''*ei'' ** ''*ai'' > ''*oi'' when the preceding syllable contains a non-rounded vowel. ** ''*ai'' > ''*ei'' elsewhere. ** Some time after this change, ''*ei'' > ''*i'' again in non-initial syllables. This latter change occurred late in Proto-Finnic and did not trigger assibilation as the earlier ''*ei'' > ''*i'' change did. It also followed the southern Finnic backing of ''*e'' to ''*ë'' (Estonian ''õ'' etc.) in back-harmony words, as only ''*ei'' was affected, while ''*ëi'' remained unchanged. Thus, different Finnic varieties show different outcomes, such as: ''*muna'' "egg", plural stem ''*munai-'' > ''*munei-'' > Finnish ''muna'', ''muni-'' but southern Finnic ''munëi-'' > Votic ''muna'', ''munõi-'', Võro ''muna'', ''munnõ-'', Estonian ''muna'', ''mune-'' (with õ > e through loss of vowel harmony). * Loss of glides before vowels: ** ''*ji'' > ''*i''. This change followed the preceding one, as former ''*eji'' becomes ''*ei'' but does not end up as ''*i'': ''*peni'' "dog", plural stem ''*peneji-'' > Finnish ''peni'', ''penei-'', Võro ''pini'', ''pin(n)e-''. ** ''*je'' > ''*e'' word-initially. ** ''*vu'' > ''*u''. ** ''*vü'' > ''*ü''. ** ''*vo'' > ''*o''. This change must have happened after Proto-Finnic broke up, as Estonian and Võro ''võtma'' "to take" preserved the consonant until after the dialectal unrounding of ''*o'' to ''*õ'' (which prevented the change from affecting it). Compare Finnish ''ottaa'', Veps ''otta'', where it did apply as there was no unrounding in those dialects.


Phonology

The sounds of Proto-Finnic can be reconstructed through the
comparative method In linguistics, the comparative method is a technique for studying the development of languages by performing a feature-by-feature comparison of two or more languages with common descent from a shared ancestor and then extrapolating backwards t ...
.


Transcription

Reconstructed Proto-Finnic is traditionally transcribed using the
Uralic Phonetic Alphabet The Uralic Phonetic Alphabet (UPA) or Finno-Ugric transcription system is a phonetic transcription or notational system used predominantly for the transcription and reconstruction of Uralic languages. It was first published in 1901 by Eemil Nes ...
. The following UPA and related conventions are adopted in this article for transcribing Proto-Finnic forms: * Front vowels are denoted with a diaeresis, as in the
Estonian orthography Estonian orthography is the system used for writing the Estonian language and is based on the Latin alphabet. The Estonian orthography is generally guided by phonemic principles, with each grapheme corresponding to one phoneme. Alphabet Due to Ge ...
: . * The affricate is written as . * The voiceless velar fricative is written as . * Long consonants and vowels are written doubled: * Half-long consonants are written with a following apostrophe: . * The labial semivowel is written as . * Diphthongs are written with two vowel letters when a consonant follows: (not ).


Consonants

The Proto-Finnic consonant inventory had relatively few phonemic fricatives, much like that of the modern Finnic languages. Voicing was not phonemically contrastive, but the language did possess voiced allophones of certain voiceless consonants. The table below lists the consonantal phonemes of Late Proto-Finnic. Phones written in parentheses represent
allophone In phonology, an allophone (; from the Greek , , 'other' and , , 'voice, sound') is a set of multiple possible spoken soundsor ''phones''or signs used to pronounce a single phoneme in a particular language. For example, in English, (as in '' ...
s and are not independent phonemes. When a consonant is notated in this article with a symbol distinct from the corresponding IPA symbol, the former is given first, followed by the latter. * *h had evolved fairly late from the Middle Proto-Finnic
postalveolar Postalveolar or post-alveolar consonants are consonants articulated with the tongue near or touching the ''back'' of the alveolar ridge. Articulation is farther back in the mouth than the alveolar consonants, which are at the ridge itself, but n ...
sibilant *š (). It may have been realised as before another consonant. * *v was perhaps realised as labiodental when a vowel followed, rather than a true
bilabial In phonetics, a bilabial consonant is a labial consonant articulated with both lips. Frequency Bilabial consonants are very common across languages. Only around 0.7% of the world's languages lack bilabial consonants altogether, including Tli ...
* was an allophone of *n before *k. The original Proto-Uralic phoneme *ŋ had been lost and changed into other sounds, except in this position. * , and were allophones of *p, *t and *k respectively, and developed as a result of consonant gradation. * Final *-k was probably unreleased . Proto-Finnic possessed two
phonemic In phonology and linguistics, a phoneme () is a unit of sound that can distinguish one word from another in a particular language. For example, in most dialects of English, with the notable exception of the West Midlands and the north-west ...
levels of consonant duration, short and long (geminate). The contrast itself had been inherited from Proto-Uralic, but was considerably expanded: all consonants except *r, *h, *j and *w could be short or long. The three plosives and the affricate ''*c'' also possessed a half-long duration (, , and ), but these appear to have been in complementary (
allophonic In phonology, an allophone (; from the Greek , , 'other' and , , 'voice, sound') is a set of multiple possible spoken soundsor ''phones''or signs used to pronounce a single phoneme in a particular language. For example, in English, (as in ' ...
) distribution with fully long consonants, and therefore are not thought to have been phonemic. They appeared in predictable positions as a result of consonant gradation, like the voiced fricatives.


Consonant gradation

Consonant gradation Consonant gradation is a type of consonant mutation (mostly lenition but also assimilation) found in some Uralic languages, more specifically in the Finnic, Samic and Samoyedic branches. It originally arose as an allophonic alternation betw ...
was a process of
lenition In linguistics, lenition is a sound change that alters consonants, making them more sonorous. The word ''lenition'' itself means "softening" or "weakening" (from Latin 'weak'). Lenition can happen both synchronically (within a language at a pa ...
that affected the obstruents. Short plosives became voiced fricatives, while long plosives became half-long: Voiced plosives occurred after nasals (''mb nd ŋg''), voiced fricatives in all other weak grade environments. It is unclear if single ''*c'' gradated, and if so, into what. No Finnic language has consonant gradation for former ''*c'', both grades result in the same outcome (mostly ''s''). Gradation occurred in two different environments, and can therefore be split into two types: * Radical gradation affected consonants that appeared at the beginning of a closed syllable (a syllable that ended in a consonant). It affected consonants preceded by a vowel or sonorant, but not those preceded by another obstruent. * Suffixal gradation affected consonants that appeared at the beginning of a non-initial odd-numbered syllable. It only affected consonants preceded by a vowel and did not affect the geminates. It is unclear whether consonant gradation was a Finnic innovation, or a retention of an old Uralic feature that was lost in most other Uralic branches. It is likely that it was inherited from an earlier stage that was also the ancestor of the
Sami languages Acronyms * SAMI, ''Synchronized Accessible Media Interchange'', a closed-captioning format developed by Microsoft * Saudi Arabian Military Industries, a government-owned defence company * South African Malaria Initiative, a virtual expertise ...
, which have gradation that is very similar to that found in the Finnic languages. However, it was still productive after certain sound changes specific to Finnic, such as the apocope of final ''*-i'', so it was probably present as a phonetic "post-processing" rule (a surface filter) over a long period of time. It is no longer fully productive in any Finnic language, but most languages still retain large amounts of words preserving the earlier alternations.


Vowels

The Proto-Finnic vowel inventory is reconstructed to a great similarity to that of modern Finnish, although the distribution of the sounds was different. The following table lists the
monophthong A monophthong ( ; , ) is a pure vowel sound, one whose articulation at both beginning and end is relatively fixed, and which does not glide up or down towards a new position of articulation. The monophthongs can be contrasted with diphthongs, wh ...
vowels reconstructable for Proto-Finnic. All vowels could occur both short and
long Long may refer to: Measurement * Long, characteristic of something of great duration * Long, characteristic of something of great length * Longitude (abbreviation: long.), a geographic coordinate * Longa (music), note value in early music mensu ...
. In Proto-Uralic, rounded vowels (''*u'', ''*ü'', ''*o'') did not occur in non-initial syllables, but because of sound changes, they emerged in Proto-Finnic. The short unrounded mid back vowel ''*ë'' was not an independent vowel, but appeared as the counterpart of the front vowel ''*e'' in the system of harmony. It merged with ''*e'' in most Finnic languages, but not in South Estonian or Votic. See below under vowel harmony for more details. The status of short ''*ö'' is unclear. It was not present in ancestral Proto-Uralic, and many instances of ''ö'' found in modern Finnic languages have only developed after Proto-Finnic, due to various sound changes. For example, Finnish has ''öy'' from ''*eü'': ''löytä-'' 'to find', ''köysi'' 'rope' < Proto-Finnic ''*leütä-'', ''*keüci'', while Estonian has unrounded the diphthong instead, giving ''leida-'' and ''köis''. Short ''ö'' was also generally added to the system for reasons of symmetry, to complete the system of vowel harmony (see below). This happened in Finnish ''näkö'' 'sight' < Proto-Finnic ''*näko'', but not in Votic ''näko''. The existence of ''öö'' is clear, as this sound had regularly evolved from other combinations of sounds, in words of Uralic origin (e.g. ''*söö-'' 'to eat' ← Proto-Uralic ''*sewi-'').


Diphthongs

Proto-Finnic also possessed
diphthong A diphthong ( ; , ), also known as a gliding vowel, is a combination of two adjacent vowel sounds within the same syllable. Technically, a diphthong is a vowel with two different targets: that is, the tongue (and/or other parts of the speech ...
s, which were formed by combinations of a short vowel with the vowels , and , or equivalently with the semivowels and . No length contrast occurred in diphthongs. A long vowel followed by a close vowel as a suffix was shortened: e.g. the imperfect forms of ''*saa-'' "to receive", ''*söö-'' "to eat" were ''*sai'', ''*söi''. This process is the only reconstructible source of ''*öi'', ''*üi''.


Vowel harmony

Proto-Finnic is reconstructed with a system of
vowel harmony In phonology, vowel harmony is an assimilatory process in which the vowels of a given domain – typically a phonological word – have to be members of the same natural class (thus "in harmony"). Vowel harmony is typically long distance, me ...
that is very similar to the one found in modern Finnish. Vowels in non-initial syllables had either a front or a back vowel, depending on the quality of the vowel of the first syllable. If the first syllable contained a front vowel, non-initial syllables would contain front vowels as well, while back vowels in the first syllable would be matched with back vowels in the other syllables. Thus, all inflectional and derivational suffixes came in two forms, a front-harmonic and a back-harmonic form. In non-initial syllables, the vowels ''e'' and ''i'' were originally a single reduced schwa-like vowel in Proto-Uralic, but had become differentiated in height over time. ''i'' arose word-finally, while ''e'' appeared medially. These vowels were front vowels at the time, and had back-vowel counterparts ''ë'' and ''ï'' . In Proto-Finnic, ''ï'' had merged with ''i'' ( > ), so that ''i'' then became neutral to vowel harmony, and now occurred in both front-vowel and back-vowel words, even if is a front vowel. The vowels ''e'' and ''ë'' appear to have remained distinct in Proto-Finnic, and remained so in
North North is one of the four compass points or cardinal directions. It is the opposite of south and is perpendicular to east and west. ''North'' is a noun, adjective, or adverb indicating direction or geography. Etymology The word ''north ...
and
South South is one of the cardinal directions or compass points. The direction is the opposite of north and is perpendicular to both east and west. Etymology The word ''south'' comes from Old English ''sūþ'', from earlier Proto-Germanic ''*sunþa ...
Estonian (as ''e'' and ''õ'') and Votic. In the other Finnic languages, and merged into ''e'' .


Phonotactics

Stress was not contrastive. Words were stressed in a trochaic pattern, with primary stress on the first syllable of a word, and secondary stress on every following odd-numbered syllable. The occurrence of two-vowel sequences was much more restricted in non-initial syllables than in initial syllables. Long vowels were absent, and some diphthongs only occurred as a result of the late contraction of disyllabic ''*Vji'' to diphthongal ''*Vi'' but were otherwise absent. Some modern Finnic languages have redeveloped long vowels and additional diphthongs in non-initial syllables as a result of the loss of certain consonants (generally ''d'', ''g'' and ''h''). Root words included at least two
moras Moras is a commune in the Isère department in southeastern France. Population See also *Communes of the Isère department The following is a list of the 512 communes in the French department of Isère Isère ( , ; frp, Isera; oc, ...
, and generally followed the structure CVCV, CVCCV, CVVCV. Rarer root types included monosyllabic roots, CVV, with either a long vowel (e.g. ''*maa'' "land, earth"; ''*puu'' "tree, wood") or a diphthong (e.g. ''*täi'' "louse", ''*käü-däk'' "to walk"); roots with three syllables: CVCVCV (e.g. ''*petägä'' "pine"; ''*vasara'' "hammer") or CVCCVCV (e.g. ''*kattila'' "kettle"); and roots with a long vowel in a closed syllable: CVVCCV (e.g. ''*mëëkka'' "sword"). A syllable could begin and end with at most one consonant. Any consonant phoneme could begin or end a syllable, but word-finally only the alveolar consonants (''*l'', ''*n'', ''*t'', ''*r'', ''*s'' and perhaps ''*c'') and the velars ''*k'' and ''*h'' occurred. Final ''*-k'' and ''*-h'' were often lost in the later Finnic languages, but occasionally left traces of their former presence. Word-internal consonant clusters were limited to two elements originally. However, the widespread syncope of ''-e-'' (detailed above) could cause a cluster to come into contact with a third consonant. When such innovative large clusters appeared, the result was the deletion of one or more elements in the cluster, usually the first. Likewise, the apocope of ''-i'' after two or more syllables could create word-final clusters, which were also simplified. This led to alternations that are still seen, though unproductive, in e.g. Finnish: * ''laps-i'' ("child", nominative) + ''-ta'' > ''las-ta'' (partitive), with medial simplification ''*-pst-'' > ''-st-'' * stem ''tuhant-'' ("thousand"): ** > ''tuhat'' (nominative), with final simplification ''*-nt'' > ''-t'' ** > ''tuhatta'' (partitive), with medial simplification ''*-ntt-'' > ''-tt-'' * stem ''kolmant-'' ("third") ** > ''kolmas'' (nominative), with final simplification (but note assibilation ''t'' > ''s'', so this reflects earlier ''*-nci'' before apocope) ** > ''kolmatta'' (partitive), with medial simplification ''*-ntt-'' > ''-tt-'' (as assibilation shows that this had a stem-final vowel originally, this reflects earlier ''*-ntet-'' before syncope) * root ''kansi'' : ''kante-'' ("lid") + causative ''-(t)ta-'' > ''kattaa'' "to cover", with medial simplification ''*-ntt-'' > ''-tt- Note in the examples of ''tuhatta'' and ''kolmatta'' that Proto-Finnic did not initially tolerate clusters of a sonorant plus a geminate consonant (i.e. clusters like ''-ntt-''). Through loanwords, analogy and further syncope, these have only later become permissible in the Finnic languages. Traditionally a single three-consonant cluster ''*-str-'' has been reconstructed for a small group of words showing ''*-tr-'' in Southern Finnic and in Eastern Finnish, ''*-sr-'' in Karelian and Veps, and in Western Finnish. This has recently been suggested to be reinterpreted as a two-consonant cluster ''*-cr-'' with an affricate as the initial member.


Grammar

All inflectional and derivational endings containing ''a'' or ''u'' also had front-vowel variants with ''ä'' and ''ü'', which matched the vowels in the word stem following the rules of vowel harmony. ''o'' did not follow this rule, as noted above. Endings which closed the final syllable of a word triggered radical gradation on that syllable. An ending could also open a previously closed syllable, which would undo the gradation. Suffixal gradation affected the endings themselves. For example, partitive ''-ta'' would appear as ''-da'' when added to a two-syllable word ending in a vowel (e.g. *''kala'', *''kalada'' "fish"), but as ''-ta'' after a third syllable or a consonant (*''veci'', *''vettä'' "water").


Nouns and adjectives


Cases

Proto-Finnic nouns declined in at least 13 cases. Adjectives did not originally decline, but adjective-noun agreement was innovated in Proto-Finnic. The plural of the nominative and accusative was marked with the ending ''-t'', while the plural of the other cases used ''-i-''. The genitive and accusative singular were originally distinct (genitive ''*-n'', accusative ''*-m''), but had fallen together when final ''*-m'' became ''*-n'' through regular sound change. Some pronouns had a different accusative ending, which distinguished them. The following cases were present: The genitive plural was formed in two different ways: * The "western" type was formed by adding the singular ending ''*-n'' to the nominative plural ''*-t'', with an additional fill vowel: ''*-t-en''. This then became ''*-den'' in most cases through consonant gradation. * The "eastern" type was formed by adding the above suffix to the plural stem: ''*-i-den''. Both types are still found in Finnish, although unevenly distributed. In the western type, the regular loss of ''-d-'' after an unstressed (even-numbered) syllable has created forms such as ''-ain'' (< ''*-a-den''), which are now archaic, or dialectal.


Locative cases

The reconstructed
locative case In grammar, the locative case ( abbreviated ) is a grammatical case which indicates a location. It corresponds vaguely to the English prepositions "in", "on", "at", and "by". The locative case belongs to the general local cases, together with the ...
s of Proto-Finnic can be classified according to a three-way contrast (to, in and from a state) in each of the two series of locative cases: inner ''–s-'' ("inside") and outer ''–l-'' ("outside", "upon", and other grammaticalized functions to denote "possessor", "instrument", etc.), to give the following system of six locative cases. In the above, ''A'' stands for either ''a'' or ''ä'' depending on
vowel harmony In phonology, vowel harmony is an assimilatory process in which the vowels of a given domain – typically a phonological word – have to be members of the same natural class (thus "in harmony"). Vowel harmony is typically long distance, me ...
, and ''V'' for an epenthetic vowel. Note that ''-nA'' is reconstructible as the
Proto-Finno-Ugric Finno-Ugric ( or ; ''Fenno-Ugric'') or Finno-Ugrian (''Fenno-Ugrian''), is a traditional grouping of all languages in the Uralic language family except the Samoyedic languages. Its formerly commonly accepted status as a subfamily of Uralic is ...
locative marker (the ancestor of the Finnic
essive case In grammar, the essive case, or similaris case, ( abbreviated ) is a grammatical case.O'Grady, William, John Archibald, Mark Aronoff, and Janie Rees-Miller. "Morphology: The Analysis of Word Structure." Contemporary Linguistics: An Introduction. 6t ...
), ''-tA'' the separative ("from") (ancestor of the
partitive case The partitive case ( abbreviated , , or more ambiguously ) is a grammatical case which denotes "partialness", "without result", or "without specific identity". It is also used in contexts where a subgroup is selected from a larger group, or with n ...
), and ''–n'', ''–s'' or ''–k'' the lative ("to"). This system is probably a Finnic innovation, although the ''–s'' and ''–l'' cases have corresponding forms in some other Uralic languages (Sami and Volgaic; and Permian, respectively).


Adjective comparison

Adjectives formed comparatives using the suffix ''*-mpa''. This suffix survives in all Finnic languages, although in several the nominative has been replaced with ''-mpi'' for unclear reasons. Only the northernmost Finnic languages have a distinct superlative suffix, like Finnish ''-in'' ~ ''-impa-''. The suffix was possibly originally a consonantal stem ''*-im(e)-'', which was modified to resemble the comparative more closely in Finnish. Its consonantal nature is apparent in an older, now-obsolete essive case form of the superlative in Finnish, which ended in ''-inna'' (< ''*-im-na'' < ''*-ime-na'' with syncope).


Possessive suffixes

Proto-Finnic had a series of
possessive suffix In linguistics, a possessive affix (from la, affixum possessivum) is an affix (usually suffix or prefix) attached to a noun to indicate its possessor, much in the manner of possessive adjectives. Possessive affixes are found in many languages o ...
es for nominals, which acted partly as genitives. These have been lost from productive use in all southern languages (traces remain in e.g. folk poetry). The system given below may therefore represent Proto-Northern Finnic rather than Proto-Finnic proper. The original vowels in the plural possessor endings are not settled: evidence exists for both ''*A'' (that is, ''*a'' ~ ''*ä'') and ''*e''. recognizes variation only for 1PP and 2PP (giving ''*A'' for 3PP). , giving an Early Proto-Finnic paradigm, does not include vowel-final variants for 3PS. Possessive suffixes were ordered after case endings, and typically attach to the oblique vowel stem: e.g. ''*sormi'' : ''*sorme-mi'' 'my finger'. The number-of-possessed contrast is by the 20th century lost everywhere except in the Southeastern Tavastian dialect of Finnish, around the municipalities of
Iitti Iitti (; sv, Itis) is a municipality of Finland. It is located in the province of Southern Finland and is part of the Päijänne Tavastia region. The municipality has a population of () and covers an area of of which is water. The population ...
and
Orimattila Orimattila () is a town in Päijänne Tavastia region, Finland. The southern part of Lahti is connected to the village of Orimattila, which is located in the region of Pennala. There are also several municipalities in the area, such as Iitti, K ...
, and even there only in the nominative in the first and second person singular. The original 3PS / 3PP contrast is lost everywhere except Ingrian. In most cases, both ending variants however still remain in use, with different endings generalized in different varieties. Standard Finnish adopts 1PP ''-mme'' (derived from the singular possessed series, with analogical ''mm'' based on the verbal inflection), but 1PS ''-ni'', 2PP ''-nne'' (derived from the plural possessed series, with regular ''*nd'' > ''nn''); and adopts 3PS ''-nsA'' in the nominative, illative and instructive (nominative ''käte-nsä'' 'her/his hand'), but ''-Vn'' (< ''*-hen'') in all other cases (e.g. inessive ''kädessä-än'' 'in her/his hand'). New plurality-of-possessed marking has emerged in the Soikkola dialect of Ingrian, suffixing the usual nominative plural marker ''-t'', e.g. ''venehe-mme-t'' 'our boats'. Old Finnish shows two archaic features in the possessive paradigm: the number-of-possessed contrast (singular ''poikaise-mi'' 'my son', versus plural ''luu-ni'' 'my bones'), and the 2nd person singular ending may attach also to the consonant stem of a nominal, with a non-assibilated ending ''-ti'' (the expected regular development before old ''*s'', ''*t'' and ''*h'' < ''*š''): e.g. ''rakkaus'' : ''rakkaut-ti'' 'your love', ''tutkain'' : ''tutkain-ti'' 'your prod' (modern Finnish ''rakkaute-si'', ''tutkaime-si''). A series of dual possessors has been proposed to account for the two different variants of 3PS, 1PP and 2PP endings; the variants ending in ''*-n'' would match with the dual possessor endings in
Proto-Samic Proto-Sami is the hypothetical, reconstructed common ancestor of the Sami languages. It is a descendant of the Proto-Uralic language. Homeland and expansion Although the current Sami languages are spoken much further to the north and west, Pr ...
.Itkonen, Erkki. 1955
Onko itämerensuomessa jälkiä duaalista?
''Virittäjä'' 59/2: 161–175.
This hypothesis has not been generally accepted.


Verbs


Finite forms

Proto-Finnic inherited at least the following
grammatical mood In linguistics, grammatical mood is a grammatical feature of verbs, used for signaling modality. That is, it is the use of verbal inflections that allow speakers to express their attitude toward what they are saying (for example, a statement of ...
s: *
Indicative mood A realis mood (abbreviated ) is a grammatical mood which is used principally to indicate that something is a statement of fact; in other words, to express what the speaker considers to be a known state of affairs, as in declarative sentences. Most ...
– suffix: present none (but -k- in the passive), past -i- *
Imperative mood The imperative mood is a grammatical mood that forms a command or request. The imperative mood is used to demand or require that an action be performed. It is usually found only in the present tense, second person. To form the imperative mood, ...
– suffix: -k(a)- *
Optative mood The optative mood ( or ; abbreviated ) is a grammatical mood that indicates a wish or hope regarding a given action. It is a superset of the cohortative mood and is closely related to the subjunctive mood but is distinct from the desiderative m ...
(possibly) – suffix: -ko- *
Conditional mood The conditional mood ( abbreviated ) is a grammatical mood used in conditional sentences to express a proposition whose validity is dependent on some condition, possibly counterfactual. It may refer to a distinct verb form that expresses the condit ...
– suffix: -ksi- or -isi- *
Potential mood In linguistics, irrealis moods ( abbreviated ) are the main set of grammatical moods that indicate that a certain situation or action is not known to have happened at the moment the speaker is talking. This contrasts with the realis moods. Every ...
– suffix: -ne- The indicative mood distinguished between present (which also functioned as future) and past tense, while the other moods had no tense distinctions. New "perfect" and "pluperfect" tenses had also been formed. These were created using a form of the copula *''oldak'' "to be" and a participle. There were six forms for each mood, for three persons and two numbers. In addition, there were two more forms. One was a form that is often called "passive" or "fourth person", and indicated an unspecified person. The second was the "connegative" form, which was used together with the negative verb to form negated sentences. All moods except the imperative shared more or less the same endings: The first and second person plural endings show evidence (reflected in Savo and Southern Ostrobothnian Finnish and in Karelian) for an earlier present tense marker, assimilated with the following consonant. This is normally reconstructed as *-k- (*-km- > *-mm-, *-kt- > *-tt-), on the assumption of this ending being originally identical with *-k found in the connegative and in the imperative mood. The variation between forms with *-ek and forms with *-a in the 1st and 2nd person plural reflects a former distinction between the dual and the plural (respectively), although this has not been attested from any Finnic variety. Estonian and Western Finnish continue *-ek, Votic and Eastern Finnic *-a(k). The third person forms only had an ending in the present indicative. In all other tenses and moods, there was no ending and the singular and plural were identical. The 3rd person singular was entirely unmarked in South Estonian: the Late Proto-Finnic ending had evolved from the participle *-pa during the Middle Proto-Finnic stage, and this innovation had not reached South Estonian, which was already separated. The imperative had its own set of endings: There is also some evidence of a distinct
optative mood The optative mood ( or ; abbreviated ) is a grammatical mood that indicates a wish or hope regarding a given action. It is a superset of the cohortative mood and is closely related to the subjunctive mood but is distinct from the desiderative m ...
, which is preserved in Finnish as ''-os'' (second-person singular). It is reconstructed as ''*-go-s'', consisting of the mood suffix ''*-ko-'' and the second-person singular ending ''*-s''. This mood suffix gave rise to alternative imperative forms in some languages, such as Finnish third-person singular ''-koon'' < ''*-ko-hen'' (the plural ''-koot'' has ''-t'' by analogy) and passive ''-ttakoon'' < ''*-tta-ko-hen''.


Non-finite forms

In addition, there were also several non-finite forms.


Negative verb

Proto-Finnic, like its descendants, expressed negation using a special negative verb, functionally highly reminiscent of Indo-European modal auxiliaries. This verb was defective and inflected only in the indicative ("does not", "did not") and the imperative ("do not") moods. The main verb was placed in its special connegative form, and expressed the main mood. The negative verb was also suppletive, having the stem ''*e-'' in the indicative and variously ''*äl-'', ''*al-'', ''*är-'' in the imperative. This has been partially levelled in Votic and most of Eastern Finnic, which show an imperative stem ''*el-''. Past tense inflection was based on the stem *es-. This is retained as a separate category only in South Estonian and Livonian, but lost in all other Finnic languages. replaced by a construction of present tense of the negative verb, plus past active participle. The distinctive Kodavere dialect of Estonian, however, adopts this and not the present stem as the basic negative verb stem: ''esin'' "I didn't", ''esid'' "you (sg.) didn't", ''es'' "s/he didn't" etc. Originally, the negative verb may have had participles and other moods as well. However, no clear traces of moods other than the indicative are found in any Finnic language. A remnant of what may be either a present active participle or an archaic third-person singular present form survives in the prefix ''*epä-'' "un-, not" (Finnish ''epä-'', Estonian ''eba-''), while a remnant of a 2nd infinitive instructive may survive in dialectal Finnish ''eten-'' "without doing". Negation of non-finite constructions was expressed using the abessive case of the infinitives or participles.


Later developments

The following is an overview of the more important changes that happened after the Proto-Finnic period.


Development of consonant clusters

These changes happened very late in the Proto-Finnic period, but as South Estonian developed somewhat differently, it shows that dialectal diversification was beginning to occur around this time. In South Estonian, ''*p'' and ''*k'' assimilate to a following dental obstruent, while ''*t'' assimilates to ''*k'', and ''*čk'' remains distinct from ''*tk''. In all Finnic dialects, original ''*pt'' and ''*kt'' have the same reflex. It is therefore impossible to distinguish them in reconstruction, unless there is additional internal evidence (in the form of grammatical alternations) or external evidence (from non-Finnic languages).


Developments to the affricates ''*c'' and ''*cc''

The non-geminated ''*c'' becomes ''*s'' generally: Proto-Finnic ''*veci'' "water", ''*cika'' "pig", ''*-inen'' : ''*-ice-'' (adjective suffix) > Finnish ''vesi'', ''sika'', ''-(i)nen'' : ''-(i)se-''. However, occasionally ''ts'' or ''ds'' remains in South Estonian: Võro ''tsiga'', ''-ne'' : ''-dse-'' or ''-se-'' (but ''vesi''). The merging of ''*c'' and ''*s'' often makes it impossible to distinguish the two sounds using Finnic evidence alone, if
internal reconstruction Internal reconstruction is a method of reconstructing an earlier state in a language's history using only language-internal evidence of the language in question. The comparative method compares variations between languages, such as in sets of c ...
is not viable (e. g., from ''t'' ~ ''s'' alternations from assibilation). The geminate affricate ''*cc'' generally remains, often spelled . In Karelian, Votic and some Finnish dialects, the two grades remain distinguished (in Karelian as : , in Votic as ~ ). In all other Finnic languages the two grades fall together (written in Veps as , as in the others). In early Finnish, both grades were fronted to interdental ''θθ'' : ''θ'', which in most dialects later changed into a variety of other dialect-specific sounds. Examples found are gradation patterns ''tt'' : ''t'', ''ht'' : ''h'', ''ht'' : ''t'', ''ss'' : ''s'' or non-gradating ''tt'' or ''ht''. In early written Finnish, the interdental fricatives are written as (for both grades) in the earliest records, which in Standard Finnish has led to the
spelling pronunciation A spelling pronunciation is the pronunciation of a word according to its spelling when this differs from a longstanding standard or traditional pronunciation. Words that are spelled with letters that were never pronounced or that were not pronounc ...
(treated as a consonant cluster and hence no longer subject to consonant gradation).


The vowel ''õ''

In the southern Finnic languages, a new back unrounded mid vowel develops from ''*e'' in words with back vowel harmony. For example Proto-Finnic ''*velka'' "debt" > Estonian ''võlg'', Võro ''võlg'', but > Finnish ''velka''. South Estonian and Votic show this development in all syllables, so that ''e'' and ''õ'' become a front and back vowel harmony pair. This may have also occurred in the earlier history of north (Standard) Estonian, but vowel harmony was later abandoned, undoing the change if it did occur. In South Estonian, ''õ'' is in front of a nasal then raised to a central unrounded vowel (represented orthographically as ), parallel to the development of the other mid vowels. E.g. Võro ''ynn, Estonian ''õnn'' "luck"; Võro ''ryngas'', Estonian ''rõngas'' "ring". In Estonian and Votic, more rarely Livonian, instances of ''õ'' also develop by unrounding of earlier short ''*o''. The detailed history of this change is unclear and shows much variation even between individual dialects of (North) Estonian. The development of ''*o'' to ''õ'' is the most general in Votic (if recent loanwords from Ingrian, Finnish and Russian are discounted) and in the Kodavere dialect of Estonian. Three main groups can thus be distinguished: A particularly interesting example is "to take", which suggests that at least some instances of this change preceded the general Finnic loss of word-initial ''*v-'' before rounded vowels, which affected Finnish and rest of Northern Finnic (which kept a rounded vowel) but not Estonian and the rest of Southern Finnic (which unrounded the vowel). It therefore must have occurred very early, in dialectal Proto-Finnic times. In a small number of words, Estonian and Votic ''õ'' can be additionally found in correspondence to North Finnic ''a'' or ''u''. Livonian and South Estonian might align with either side, depending on the word. E.g. * "all": Estonian ''kõik'', Votic ''kõittši'', Võro ''kyik'' — Finnish and Karelian ''kaikki'', Veps ''kaik'' * "thread": Estonian ''lõng'', Votic ''lõnka'' — Finnish and Karelian ''lanka'', Veps and South Estonian ''lang'', Livonian ''lānga'' * "or": Estonian and Livonian ''või'' — Finnish, Karelian, Veps and Võro ''vai'' (Votic ''vai'', possibly from Ingrian) * "word": Estonian and Votic ''sõna'', Livonian ''sõnā'', Võro ''syna'' — Finnish, Karelian and Veps ''sana'' * Estonian and Võro ''mõistma'', Votic ''mõissaa'' "to understand" — Finnish and Karelian ''muistaa'', Veps ''muštta'' "to remember" * "heath": Estonian ''nõmm'', Votic ''nõmmi'' — Finnish ''nummi''


Vowel reduction and loss

Short final vowels are lost after long syllables (two consonants or a syllable with a long vowel or diphthong) in Veps, partly Ludian, both North and South Estonian, and most Southwestern dialects of Finnish. For example, Proto-Finnic ''*kakci'' "two", ''*neljä'' "four", ''*viici'' "five" > Estonian ''kaks'', ''neli'', ''viis'', Veps ''kaks, ''nel'l''', ''viž'', Võro ''katś'', ''nelli'', ''viiś'', but > standard Finnish ''kaksi'', ''neljä'', ''viisi''. This change occurred before the loss of final consonants (if any), as vowels that were originally followed by a consonant were not lost. The loss of final ''*-i'' leaves phonemic palatalization of the preceding consonant in many languages, on which see below.
Colloquial Finnish Colloquial or spoken Finnish () refers to the unstandardized spoken variety of the Finnish language, in contrast with the standardized form of the language (). It is used primarily in personal communication and varies somewhat between the differen ...
loses word-final ''i'' under more limited conditions, in particular after ''s'' (e.g. ''kaks'' "two", ''viis'' "5"; inflectional endings such as ''aamuks'' "for/to the morning" (translative), ''talos'' "your house" (2nd person singular possessive), ''tulis'' "would come" (3rd person singular conditional)) as well as word-final ''a/ä'' from several inflectional endings (e.g. inessive ''-s(s)'', elative ''-st'', adessive ''-l(l)'', ablative ''-lt''). Ingrian also has word-final ''i''-reduction, sometimes obligatory, but more often optional. Thus, ''*kakci'' > ''kaks'', ''*viici'' > ''viis'', but ''*suuri'' > ''suur'', ''suuri'', ''*peeni'' > ''peeni'', ''peen'', ''*keeli'' > ''keeli'', ''keel''. In the Soikkola, Hevaha and Ylä-Laukaa dialects of Ingrian, the word-final ''a/ä'' in inflectional endings often reduce as well (e.g. inessive ''-s'', elative ''-st'', adessive ''-l'', ablative ''-lt''), and a short vowel preceding these endings, unless directly following a short stressed syllable, is elongated Moreover, the Ala-Laukaa dialect of Ingrian - under influence of Votic - developed a more complex system of vowel reduction in any unstressed syllable unless immediately following a short stressed syllable. In Livonian, all short final vowels except ''*a'' and ''*ä'' are lost, thus giving ''*kakci'' > ''kakš'' as in Estonian, but also ''*veci'' "water" > ''ve'ž'', while no vowel was lost in ''*neljä'' > ''nēļa'', ''*kala'' "fish" > ''kalā''. Unstressed ''*o'' merges into ''*u'' in Northern Estonian. Vowel harmony is lost in Estonian, Livonian and partly Veps, but not South Estonian or Votic. For example, Proto-Finnic ''*külä'' "village" > Estonian ''küla'' and Livonian ''kilā'', but > Finnish ''kylä'', Veps ''külä'', Votic ''tšülä'', Võro ''külä''. In Finnish and Karelian, vowel harmony was retained and extended to ''*o'' as well, creating a new vowel ''*ö'' in words with front vowel harmony. Many languages in the Southern Finnic group, as well as again Veps and Southwestern Finnish, show loss of unstressed vowels in medial syllables. In these languages, vowel length is lost before ''h'' early on, while diphthongs are simplified into short vowels.


Palatalization

Palatalized consonants are reintroduced into most varieties other than Western Finnish. The most widespread source is regressive palatalization due to a lost word-final or word-medial ''*-i'' (a form of cheshirization), and consonant clusters with ''*j'' as a second member. In several varieties, there is also progressive palatalization, where a diphthong ending in ''*-i'' and the long vowel ''*ii'' causes palatalization of a following consonant. * In Livonian, the palatalized ''*ś'' and ''*ź'' that arose from loss of ''*-i'' generally shift to postalveolar ''š'' and ''ž''. * In Votic, ''*k'' and ''*g'' are palatalized to ''tš'' and ''j'' before all front vowels. * Veps undergoes both regressive and progressive palatalization, but with different outcomes: *# Progressive palatalization of post-Proto-Finnic ''*s'' yields postalveolar ''š'' or ''ž''. For example, Proto-Finnic ''*viici'' "five" > ''*viisi'' > Veps ''viž''. *# Regressive palatalization of post-Proto-Finnic ''*s'' yields alveolo-palatal ''ś'' or ''ź''. For example, Proto-Finnic ''*kuuci'' "six" > ''*kuusi'' > Veps ''kuź''. * In Northern Karelian, a general shift ''*s'' > ''š'' occurs, except blocked in progressive palatalization contexts. Estonian, Votic and Finnish do not have general palatalization, and ''š'' occurs almost solely in loanwords, most commonly of Russian or German origin.


Loss of final consonants

Final ''*-k'' was generally lost. It is preserved in some dialects: * In Eastern Votic as ''-g'' * In Võro as ''-q'' (a glottal stop ) * In the now extinct Hevaha dialect of Ingrian as ''-k'' when following ''-tV-'' or ''-tsV-''. Final ''*-h'' is widely lost as well. It is preserved: * In Karelian and Veps as ''-h''. * In Southern Estonian as either ''-h'' or as a glottal stop ''-q''. * In the now extinct Hevaha and Ylä-Laukaa dialects of Ingrian as ''-h'' Traces of both ''*-k'' and ''*-h'' remain in Finnish, where the consonants became a
sandhi Sandhi ( sa, सन्धि ' , "joining") is a cover term for a wide variety of sound changes that occur at morpheme or word boundaries. Examples include fusion of sounds across word boundaries and the alteration of one sound depending on near ...
effect, assimilating to the initial consonant of the following word and lengthening it. This effect does not occur in all dialects and is not represented orthographically, but is often noted with a superscript "ˣ" in reference works. In Western dialects there was also metathesis of ''*h'', which preserved the original ''*h'' along with sandhi lengthening, e.g. Proto-Finnic ''*mureh'' "sorrow" > Western Finnish ''murheˣ'' (Karelian ''mureh'', Võro ''murõh''/''murõq'') and Proto-Finnic ''*veneh'' "boat" > Western Finnish ''venheˣ'' (Karelian/Veps ''veneh'', Võro ''vineh''/''vineq''). Standard Finnish inconsistently adopts some words in their Western Finnish shape (e.g. ''murhe''; ''perhe'' "family", ''valhe'' "lie"), some in their Eastern Finnish shape (e.g. ''vene''; ''huone'' "room"). Final ''*-n'' is lost in most of the South Finnic area (as well as widely in modern-day colloquial Finnish). In Votic this triggers
compensatory lengthening Compensatory lengthening in phonology and historical linguistics is the lengthening of a vowel sound that happens upon the loss of a following consonant, usually in the syllable coda, or of a vowel in an adjacent syllable. Lengthening triggered ...
of the preceding vowel. The 1st person verbal ending resists the change, and generally remains as ''-n''. Loss of final consonants followed the loss of final vowels. Thus, vowels followed by a lost consonant were preserved.


Loss of voiced obstruents

The voiced obstruents ''*b/β'', ''*d/δ'' and ''*g/γ'' that occurred as the weak grades of single plosives were often lost or modified in various ways. The simplest outcomes are in the marginal languages Livonian, Ludic and Veps, where all three are reflected as plain voiced stops ''b'', ''d'' and ''g'' respectively regardless of environment. The remaining languages show more complex developments. ''*b/β'' develops relatively uniformly: * The fricative ''*β'' merges with ''*v''. * The nasal-plosive cluster ''*mb'' assimilates to ''mm'', except in Olonets Karelian (Livvi). The development of ''*d/δ'' is more diverse: * The clusters ''*lδ'' and ''*rδ'' are widely assimilated to geminated ''*ll'' and ''*rr'', creating the characteristic gradation patterns ''lt'' ~ ''ll'' and ''rt'' ~ ''rr''. * In other positions, ''*δ'' is lost early on in the other languages of the Eastern Finnic group (Eastern Finnish, Karelian and Ingrian) as well as in Estonian. * In Western Finnish, ''*δ'' is lost after an unstressed syllable, but remains after a stressed syllable. It remained initially as , but shifted to or in Ostrobothnian and to in Tavastian. In Standard Finnish, the sound was written or early on, and pronunciation has now become through spelling pronunciation. Individual words may follow particular dialects instead, e.g. zero in ''*naudetta'' > ''navetta'' "cowshed", ''l'' in ''*tadikkoi'' > ''talikko'' "manure fork". * The nasal-plosive cluster ''*nd'' assimilates to ''nn'', except in Olonets Karelian. ''*g/γ'' develops somewhat similar to ''*d/δ'', but with several conditional outcomes: * In Votic, ''*γ'' is fortified to when not palatalized (see above). * In Karelian, the clusters ''*lγ'' and ''*rγ'' become geminated ''*ll'' and ''*rr'', like the clusters ''*lδ'' and ''*rδ''. * In Western Finnish, ''*lγ'' and ''*rγ'' become ''*lj'' and ''*rj'' when followed by an unrounded front vowel (''*i'', ''*e'', and often ''*ä''), although there is wide variation and there are exceptions for each vowel. There are also many words in which the cluster ''*hk'' develops into ''*hγ'' analogically, which then likewise develops into ''*hj'', although again with numerous exceptions. * Between two labial vowels, ''*γ'' becomes ''*v'' in Western Finnish. * In all remaining languages and positions, ''*γ'' is lost. * The nasal-plosive cluster ''*ŋg'' is assimilated to the corresponding geminate ''ng'' in several of the Finnish dialects. However, given the lack of a pre-existing ''*ŋ'', the cluster widely "un-gradates" back to ''*ŋk''. The loss of consonants often created new long vowels and diphthongs, particularly in non-initial syllables. Compare for example: * Finnish ''auttaa'' "to help" < Proto-Finnic ''*abuttadak'' with the unmodified strong grade in ''apu'' "help, assistance". * North and South Estonian ''susi'' "wolf", genitive ''soe'' < Proto-Finnic ''*suci'', ''*suδen''.


Lenition

In all Finnic languages except Finnish, Northern Karelian, the Ala-Laukaa dialect of Ingrian and Votic (partially), the voiceless (strong grade) obstruent consonants ''*p'', ''*t'', ''*k'' and ''*s'', are lenited to voiced or lax voiceless obstruents ''b'', ''d'', ''g'', ''z'' when occurring between voiced sounds. In Veps and Livonian, these new voiced plosives merge with their weak grade counterparts. In Estonian ''s'' remains voiceless and ''b'', ''d'', ''g'' are not fully voiced, instead remaining as lax voiceless consonants , , .


Raising or diphthongization of long vowels

In many Finnic languages, long vowels develop into opening diphthongs by raising the onset, or show general raising instead. The long mid vowels ''*oo'', ''*öö'' and ''*ee'' become opening diphthongs , , in Finnish, Karelian, and several marginal dialects of Northern Estonian. In Western Finnish dialects their second component widely becomes more open, producing , , or even , and either or depending on vowel harmony. Diphthongization also occurs in Livonian, but only under certain conditions, and the mid back unrounded long vowel ''õõ'' is not affected. In Livonian, the short vowels ''*o'' and ''*e'' may also diphthongize, leading to a contrast of short ''uo'', ''ie'' , with long ''ūo'', ''īe'' , . In many Ingrian dialects, ''ee'', ''oo'' and ''öö'' merge with ''ii'' , ''uu'' and ''yy'' . In South Estonian, raising only occurs in overlong syllables, and results in long close vowels ''uu'', ''üü'' and ''ii''. In Eastern Finnish and Karelian, the low vowels ''*aa'' and ''*ää'' also diphthongize, becoming Karelian ''oa'', ''eä'', Savonian ''ua'', ''iä''. In standard Livonian, long ''*aa'' of any origin is at a late date generally raised to ''ǭ'' .


Diphthong assimilation

The diphthong ''*eü'' is fully labialized to ''öü'' in Northern Finnic and South Estonian. In northern dialects of Veps, new long close vowels are created by the raising of several diphthongs: * ''*ei'', ''*öi'' > ''ii''. * ''*iu'', ''*iü'', ''*eu'', ''*öü'' > ''üü'' ~ ''üu''. * ''*au'', ''*ou'' > ''uu''. North Estonian instead unrounds all diphthongs ending in ''-ü'' to ''-i'': * ''*eü'' > ''ei'' * ''*äü'' > ''äi'' In Savonian Finnish, the 2nd element of all diphthongs is lowered: * ''*au'', ''*äü'' > ''ao'', ''äö'' or further > ''aa'', ''ää'' * ''*ai'', ''*äi'' > ''ae'', ''äe'' * ''*oi'', ''*öi'' > ''oe'', ''öe'' In Livonian, ''*au'' is labialized to ''ou'', and ''*äi'' is palatalized to ''ei''. Following this, the mid diphthongs are smoothed to long vowels under certain conditions: * ''ou'' > ''oo'' * ''õi'', ''õu'' > ''õõ'' * ''ei'' > ''ee''


Coda vocalization

A variety of languages shows a change of a syllable-final consonant into a vowel. This is not one single change, but several independent developments. In the Southern Finnic group, ''*n'' is lost before ''*s'' (< Proto-Finnic ''*s'' or ''*c''), with compensatory lengthening of the preceding vowel. For example Proto-Finnic ''*kanci'' "lid", ''*pensas'' "bush" > Estonian ''kaas'', ''põõsas'', but > Finnish ''kansi'', ''pensas''. In Western Finnish, stop consonants before a sonorant are vocalized to ''u''. E.g. ''*kapris'' "goat", ''*atra'' "plough", ''*kakra'' "oats" > Finnish ''kauris'', ''aura'', ''kaura'', but > Estonian ''kaber'', ''ader'', ''kaer'', Karelian ''kapris'', ''atra'', ''kakra''. Standard Finnish mostly follows the Western Finnish model. Some notable exceptions include '' kekri'' "All Saints' Eve feast", '' kupla'' "bubble". Syllable-final ''*l'' is vocalized in Veps at a late date, creating ''u''-final diphthongs in the northern and central dialects, long vowels in the southern.


Notes


References

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External links

{{Uralic languages Finnic languages Finnic