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Proto-Samoyedic, or Proto-Samoyed, is the reconstructed ancestral language of the Samoyedic languages: Nenets ( Tundra and Forest),
Enets The Enets (russian: энцы, ; singular: , ; also known as Yenetses, Entsy, Entsi, Yenisei or Yenisey Samoyeds) are a Samoyedic ethnic group who live on the east bank, near the mouth, of the Yenisei River. Historically nomadic people, they now ...
, Nganasan, Selkup, as well as extinct
Kamas Kamas may mean * Kamas, Utah * Kamas (raga), a ragam in Carnatic music * KAMAS (program), an acronym for ''Knowledge and Mind Amplification System'', an outline processor * Kamasins, a Samoyedic people * Kamassian language, an extinct Samoyedic l ...
and Mator. Samoyedic is one of the principal branches of the Uralic language family, and its ancestor is
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 ...
. It has been suggested that Proto-Samoyedic greatly influenced the development of Tocharian, an Indo-European language.


Phonology

A fairly complex system of vowel phonemes is reconstructed for Proto-Samoyedic: The system is retained relatively faithfully in Selkup (though expanded with vowel length). Two of the vowel contrasts are however only retained in Nganasan: the distinction of front and back reduced vowels, and that of *i versus *e. For the remainder of the family, following the mergers *e > *i and *ə̈ > *ə, a further shared change is raising of *ä > *e. Earlier works often thus give a slightly different transcription of several vowels: Even though the number of vowel phonemes was high, there were no long vowels or phonemic diphthongs. A peculiar feature of the reconstructed vowel system is the occurrence of vowel sequences, which consisted of any full vowel followed by the reduced vowel /ə/: for example, *''tuə'' 'feather', *''kåəså'' 'man'. These sequences were not diphthongs; the vowels belonged to separate syllables. Evidence of the vowel sequences has been preserved in only part of the Samoyedic languages, primarily in Nganasan and
Enets The Enets (russian: энцы, ; singular: , ; also known as Yenetses, Entsy, Entsi, Yenisei or Yenisey Samoyeds) are a Samoyedic ethnic group who live on the east bank, near the mouth, of the Yenisei River. Historically nomadic people, they now ...
. Wagner-Nagy (2004) lists the following examples: * Close + reduced: *iə, *iə̈, *üə, *üə̈, *uə, *uə̈ * Mid + reduced: *öə, *ëə, *oə, *oə̈ * Open + reduced: *äə (> *eə), *åə * Close + open: *uå * Reduced + open: *əå Proto-Samoyedic had vowel harmony like many other Uralic languages. Harmony determined whether a front vocalic or a back vocalic allomorph of a
suffix In linguistics, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns, adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Suffixes can carr ...
was used. However, the restrictions imposed by vowel harmony were not absolute because also disharmonic word-stems can be reconstructed. Such stems break vowel harmony by combining front and back vowels: e.g. Proto-Samoyedic *''kålä'' 'fish', *''wäsa'' 'iron'. In contrast to the vowel system, the consonant system is rather simple with only 13 phonemes: The exact sound value of the affricate is not entirely clear; it may originally have been retroflex rather than dental or alveolar . It has remained distinct only in Selkup, merging elsewhere with *''t''. As in
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 ...
, the ancestor of Proto-Samoyedic, the first syllable of words was always stressed, and hence there was no contrastive stress. Contrastive tones did not occur either.


Phonotactics

As in Proto-Uralic, words could begin with a maximum of one consonant: initial consonant clusters were not allowed. Another phonotactic constraint inherited from Proto-Uralic was that the consonants *''r'' and *''ŋ'' were not allowed word-initially. Proto-Samoyedic had, however, innovated final consonant clusters in a few words. In all of them, the first consonant in the cluster was the semivowel *''j'', as in *''wajŋ'' 'breath'. Thus, the syllable structure of Proto-Samoyedic was altogether (C)V(j)(C). Inside words, clusters of two consonants were common. Clusters of three consonants were again possible only if the first consonant of the cluster was *''j'', as in *''wajkkə'' 'neck'.


Later development

Palatalization of consonants, most prominently *''k'', has occurred in all recorded Samoyedic languages. This is however a post-Proto-Samoyedic development, as the details differ in each branch due to vowel developments. * The Nenets-Enets group palatalizes both *''k'' and *''s'' to /sʲ/. * Nganasan, Selkup and Kamassian palatalize *''k'' to a distinct /ʃ/. Nganasan also palatalizes *''s'' to /sʲ/. * Mator appears to have no palatalization of *''k''; however, *''s'' is, somewhat unusually, velarized to /k/. * Nenets-Enets and Nganasan have prominent palatalization of other consonants as well, leading to contraction of the vowel system. Other widespread developments include prothesis of *''ŋ'', initial lenition of *''p'', and fortition of the semivowels *''w'', *''j''. * In Nganasan, Nenets and Enets, PS vowel-initial words gain an initial /ŋ/ via
rhinoglottophilia In linguistics, rhinoglottophilia refers to the connection between laryngeal (glottal) and nasal articulations. The term was coined by James A. Matisoff in 1975. There is a connection between the acoustic production of laryngeals and nasals, a ...
(which may be subsequently palatalized to /nʲ/). This is occasionally found in other Samoyedic languages as well, usually with the exception of Mator. * PS initial *''p'' is lenited to /f/ in Enets, /h/ in Mator and Nganasan. (/f/ still appears in the oldest Nganasan records.) * PS initial *''w'' remains only in Nenets. In Selkup, it becomes /kʷ/; all other varieties shift it to /b/. * PS initial *''j'' remains in both Nenets and Enets. It becomes /tʲ/ in Selkup, and /dʲ/ in other varieties. * In Mator and Kamassian, /b/, /dʲ/ are furthermore nasalized to /m/, /nʲ/ preceding a word-internal nasal. This has been an areal change, shared also with Siberian Turkic languages such as
Khakas The Khakas (also spelled Khakass; Khakas: , ''khakas'', , ''tadar'', , ''khakastar'', , ''tadarlar'') are a Turkic indigenous people of Siberia, who live in the republic of Khakassia, Russia. They speak the Khakas language. The Khakhassi ...
.


Morphology

Proto-Samoyedic was a fairly typical
agglutinative language An agglutinative language is a type of synthetic language with morphology that primarily uses agglutination. Words may contain different morphemes to determine their meanings, but all of these morphemes (including stems and affixes) tend to rem ...
with only little morphophonological alteration, apart from vowel harmony. In the following, ''-A'' marks an archiphoneme realized as ''-å'' in words with back-vocalic harmony, ''-ä'' in words with front-vocalic harmony. Three numbers were distinguished: singular, dual and
plural The plural (sometimes list of glossing abbreviations, abbreviated pl., pl, or ), in many languages, is one of the values of the grammatical number, grammatical category of number. The plural of a noun typically denotes a quantity greater than the ...
. Possession was indicated with possessive suffixes. Nouns distinguished seven cases: * Nominative: (no ending) * Genitive: *-n * Accusative: *-m * Locative: *-kə-nA * Ablative: *-kə-t(ə) * Dative: *-kə- * Prosecutive: *-mə-nA Verbs were conjugated for mood, tense,
number A number is a mathematical object used to count, measure, and label. The original examples are the natural numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, and so forth. Numbers can be represented in language with number words. More universally, individual number ...
and person. There were also separate subjective and objective conjugations. Derivational suffixes were numerous, and could form both verbs and nominals.


Development

Most Proto-Samoyedic phonemes continue the corresponding Proto-Uralic phonemes unchanged. The most prominent changes are: * PU *''s, š'' > PEU *''θ'' > PS *''t''. * PU *''ś'' > PS *''s''. * PU *''δ'' > PS *''r''. * PU *''δ́ as well as PU *''l'' in most positions > PS *''j''. *''l'' remains initially before PU *''ï'', as well as in PS intervocalic positions. * PU *''x'' > PS *''ø'', when before a consonant. * PU *''u'' > PS *''ø'' preceding a PU stem vowel *''a''. * PU *''ï'' > PS *''ë'' in PS closed syllables. * PU *''ü'' > PS *''i''. PS *''ü'' is of secondary origin. * PU stem-final *''i'' is reduced to PS *''ø̈''/''ø'' (per harmony), and if not preceded by an original consonant cluster, subsequently lost. * PU *''a, o'' generally become PS *''å'', though in many cases PS *''a'' also appears; the conditioning for this is not entirely clear. * PU stem-final *''å'' becomes PS *''ä'' after a lateral consonant (PU *''l'' or *''δ́''; this points to an intermediate stage *''ĺ'' in the development of the latter.) * PU *''o'' remains in monosyllabic roots (both primary, and those resulting from loss of final *''ø''). * PU *''k'', *''x'', *''w'', *''j'' are lost between vowels in roots of the shape *CVCi, yielding monosyllabic PS roots. * PU *''k'' and preconsonantal *''w'' are generally lost in medial consonant clusters. Examples: * PU *äjmä "needle" > PS *äjmä * PU *kala "fish" > PS *kålä * PU *muna "egg" > PS *mønå * PU *weti "water" > PS *wet * PU *nüδi "handle" > PS *nir * PU *ïpti "hair" > PS *ëptø * PU *täwði "full" > PS *tärø̈ * PU *mośki- "to wash" > PS *måsø- * PU *suksi "ski" > PS *tutø * PU *ńïxli "arrow" > PS *ńëøj * PU *käxli "tongue" > PS *käøj


Numerals

Proto-Samoyedic numerals with wider Uralic cognates are:Luobbal Sámmol Sámmol Ánte (Ante Aikio): Proto-Uralic. — To appear in: Marianne Bakró-Nagy, Johanna Laakso & Elena Skribnik (eds.), ''The Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages''. Oxford University Press. * *kitä ‘2’ * *säjʔwǝ ‘7’ * *wüǝt ‘10’ (cognate with Finno-Ugric numerals for ‘5’) Innovative Proto-Samoyedic numerals with no apparent wider Uralic cognates: * *nakur ‘3’ * *tättǝ ‘4’ * *sǝmpǝläŋkǝ ‘5’ * *mǝ̑ktut ‘6’


References

Janhunen, Juha 1998. Samoyedic. In: Daniel Abondolo (ed.), ''The Uralic Languages'', pp. 457–479. London / New York: Routledge.


Sources

* {{Uralic languages Samoyedic languages Samoyedic