Old Irish
Old Irish, also called Old Gaelic (, Ogham, Ogham script: ᚌᚑᚔᚇᚓᚂᚉ; ; ; or ), is the oldest form of the Goidelic languages, Goidelic/Gaelic language for which there are extensive written texts. It was used from 600 to 900. The ...
was affected by a series of
phonological change
In historical linguistics, phonological change is any sound change that alters the distribution of phonemes in a language. In other words, a language develops a new system of oppositions among its phonemes. Old contrasts may disappear, new ones ...
s that radically altered its appearance compared with
Proto-Celtic
Proto-Celtic, or Common Celtic, is the hypothetical ancestral proto-language of all known Celtic languages, and a descendant of Proto-Indo-European. It is not attested in writing but has been partly Linguistic reconstruction, reconstructed throu ...
and older Celtic languages (such as
Gaulish
Gaulish is an extinct Celtic languages, Celtic language spoken in parts of Continental Europe before and during the period of the Roman Empire. In the narrow sense, Gaulish was the language of the Celts of Gaul (now France, Luxembourg, Belgium, ...
, which still had the appearance of typical early Indo-European languages such as
Latin
Latin ( or ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally spoken by the Latins (Italic tribe), Latins in Latium (now known as Lazio), the lower Tiber area aroun ...
or
Ancient Greek
Ancient Greek (, ; ) includes the forms of the Greek language used in ancient Greece and the classical antiquity, ancient world from around 1500 BC to 300 BC. It is often roughly divided into the following periods: Mycenaean Greek (), Greek ...
). The changes occurred at a fairly rapid pace between 350 and 550 CE.
Summary of changes
A capsule summary of the most important changes is (in approximate order):
# Syllable-final (from PIE , ) assimilated to the following phoneme, even across word boundaries in the case of syntactically connected words.
#* Voiceless stops became voiced: > .
#* Voiced stops became prenasalised . They were reduced to simple nasals during the Old Irish period.
#* Before a vowel, was attached to the beginning of the syllable.
#
Lenition
In linguistics, lenition is a sound change that alters consonants, making them "weaker" in some way. The word ''lenition'' itself means "softening" or "weakening" (from Latin 'weak'). Lenition can happen both synchronically (within a language ...
of all single consonants between vowels. That applied across word boundaries in the case of syntactically connected words.
#* Stops became fricatives.
#* became (later lost unless the following syllable was stressed).
#* was eventually lost (much later).
#* became a nasalised
continuant
In phonetics
Phonetics is a branch of linguistics that studies how humans produce and perceive sounds or, in the case of sign languages, the equivalent aspects of sign. Linguists who specialize in studying the physical properties of speech ...
(; perhaps or ).
#* remained, but the non-lenited variants were strengthened to (see
Old Irish phonology).
# Extensive
umlaut ("affection") of short vowels, which were raised or lowered to agree with the height of following Proto-Celtic vowels. Similarly, rounding of to or often occurred adjacent to
labial consonant
Labial consonants are consonants in which one or both lips are the active articulator. The two common labial articulations are bilabials, articulated using both lips, and labiodentals, articulated with the lower lip against the upper teeth, b ...
s.
#
Palatalization
Palatalization may refer to:
*Palatalization (phonetics), the phonetic feature of palatal secondary articulation
*Palatalization (sound change)
Palatalization ( ) is a historical-linguistic sound change that results in a palatalized articulati ...
of all consonants before front vowels.
# Loss of part or all of final syllables.
# Loss of most interior vowels (
syncope).
They led to the following effects:
* Both the palatalised ("slender") and lenited variants of consonants were
phonemicised, multiplying the consonant inventory by four (broad, broad lenited, slender, slender lenited). Variations between broad and slender became an important part of the grammar:
** in masc. -stems: "son" (nom. acc.) vs. (gen.), "back" (nom. acc.) vs. (gen.), cf. Latin (nom.), (acc.) vs. (gen.);
** in fem. -stems: "tribe, people" (nom.) vs. (acc. dat.), "pig" (nom.) vs. (acc. dat.);
** in -stems: "father" (gen.) vs. (nom. acc. dat.).
* Lenition and nasal assimilation across word boundaries in syntactically connected words produced extensive
sandhi
Sandhi ( ; , ) is any of 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 nearby sounds or the grammatical function o ...
effects (
Irish initial mutations
Irish language, Irish, like all modern Celtic languages, is characterised by its initial consonant mutations. These mutations affect the initial consonant of a word under specific morphology (linguistics), morphological and syntax, syntactic ...
). The variations became an important part of the grammar.
* Both umlaut (vowel affection) and especially syncope radically increased the amount of allomorphy found across declensions and conjugations. The most dramatic deviations are due to syncope: compare "they say" vs. "they do not say" or "he surpasses" vs. "he does not surpass" (where the stressed syllable is boldfaced).
Syncope in detail
In more detail, syncope of internal syllables involved the following steps (in approximate order):
* Loss of most final consonants, including , , , , , and all clusters involving (except , , where only the is lost).
* Loss of absolutely final short vowels (including those that became final as a result of loss of a final consonant and original long final vowels).
* Shortening of long vowels in unstressed syllables.
* Collapsing of vowels in hiatus (producing new unstressed long vowels).
*
Syncope (deletion) of vowels in every other interior unstressed syllable following the stress. If there are two remaining syllables after the stress, the first one loses its vowel; if there are four remaining syllables after the stress, the first and third lose their vowel.
* Resolution of impossible clusters resulting from syncope and final-vowel deletion:
** Adjacent homorganic
obstruent
An obstruent ( ) is a speech sound such as , , or that is formed by ''obstructing'' airflow. Obstruents contrast with sonorants, which have no such obstruction and so resonate. All obstruents are consonants, but sonorants include vowels as well ...
s where either sound was a fricative became a geminate stop, voiceless if either sound was voiceless (e.g. > ; etc. > ).
** Otherwise, adjacent obstruents assumed the voicing of the second consonant (e.g. > ; > ; > ).
** not adjacent to a vowel became syllabic and then had a vowel inserted before them (e.g. "world" < < < ; "sin" < ). However, in the case of , that occurred only when the nasal had not previously been joined to a following voiced stop as a result of nasal assimilation: compare "present" (disyllabic).
** Remaining impossible clusters were generally simplified by deletion of consonants not adjacent to vowels (such as between other consonants). However, Old Irish tolerated geminates adjacent to other consonants as well other quite complex clusters: "name" (one syllable), "widow", "they are shown".
Changes to Proto-Celtic stressed short vowels
All five Proto-Celtic short vowels (, , , , ) survived into Primitive Irish more or less unchanged in stressed syllables.
During approximately A.D. 450-550 (just before the Old Irish period, c. 600-900), however, there occurred several vowel-changes (
umlauts). Former vowels are modified in various ways depending on the following vowels (or sometimes surrounding consonants). The mutations are known in Celtic literature as ''affections'' or ''infections'' such as these, the most important ones:
# -affection: Short and are raised to and when the following syllable contains a high vowel (, , , ). It does not happen when the vowels are separated by voiceless consonants or certain consonant groups.
# -affection: Short and are lowered to and when the following syllable contains a non-high back vowel (, , , ).
# -infection: Short , , are broken to short diphthongs , , when the following syllable contains a or that was later lost. It is assumed that at the point the change operated, -vowels that were later lost were short while those that remain were long . The change operates after -affection so original may end up as .
Nominal examples (reconstructed forms are Primitive Irish unless otherwise indicated):
Before i-affection occurred, there was also a lowering of initial-syllable Proto-Celtic ''e'' to ''a'' before palatalized reflexes of , unless a followed them in the next syllable in Primitive Irish (no matter the 's origin) which would instead lead to i-affection to ''i''. For instance, Proto-Celtic "(s)he lies" vs. "they lie" vs. "lying" led to a three-way split in Old Irish , , and respectively.
Verbal paradigm example:
:
The result of -affection and -affection is that it is often impossible to distinguish whether the root vowel was originally or ( < and < have identical declensions). However, note the cases of vs. above for which -affection, but not -affection, was blocked by an intervening .
Complications of u-infection
The result of ''u''-infection of ''*a'' eventually reduced to /u/ during the Old Irish period. It does ''not'' share its later evolution with original ''*au'', which instead became (or broken into ) in Old Irish.
In addition, the u-affection of ''a'' when the ''u'' preceded a palatalized consonant originally turned the ''a'' into an , whose spelling varied among ''au'', ''ai'', ''i'', ''e'', and ''u'' depending on the scribe. then spread to various terms prefixed with "fore-" and "ad-".
Stressed front vowels in hiatus
Stressed short front vowels in hiatus underwent a loop throughout Primitive Irish and early Old Irish in which they would repeatedly switch between ''i'' and ''e''. McCone outlines the loop as follows:
# Primitive Irish ''*e'' before a hiatus (i.e. over or ''*y'' between two vowels) raised to ''*i'' before a non-front vowel.
# Primitive Irish ''*i'' before a hiatus then underwent ''a''-affection normally, lowering it down to ''*e''.
# In early Old Irish, stressed ''*e'' before a hiatus raised again to ''i'' if the hiatus avoided syncope. If syncope had removed the hiatus, the ''e'' was not raised.
Examples of words that went through this loop include:
* The ''a''-subjunctive paradigm of "to buy".
** The 3rd-person plural conjunct > > > showcases a full loop.
** The 3rd-person plural relative > > > shows Step 3 being skipped due to syncope deleting the hiatus that triggered the verb's progress in the loop.
* The declension of "whitethorn", where Step 1 is inapplicable.
** The nominative singular > > > > shows apocope destroying a hiatus, leading to Step 3 being skipped.
** The genitive singular > > > > > shows a completed cycle with Steps 2 and 3 undergone.
Short vowels before nasals and stops
Proto-Celtic ''*a'' before nasals followed by a stop manifested as the allophone in the prehistory of Irish.
Short vowels and ''*e'', and ''*i'' regularly became ''e'' before nasals followed by originally voiceless stops, which then lengthened to in stressed syllables.
* "100" < and "death" <
* "path, way" <
* "lets, leaves" < (secondarily transferred to the weak verbs)
But a different development of occurred before nasals followed by voiced stops. According to Schrijver, this became ''i'' when affected by ''i''-affection and ''a'' when it was not.
McCone however instead believes that ''i'' was the default outcome of before voiced nasals unless a-affection applied, lowering it down to ''a''.
Some examples of these developments include:
* Without raising:
** "land" <
** "crooked" <
** "in it" <
* With raising:
** "melodious" <
** "around" <
** "fingernail, toenail" <
** "navel" <
Additionally, and ''*e'' were also raised to ''i'' when followed by a nasal, a voiced stop, and then either ''*e'' or a word-final ''*a'' followed by a nasal, despite those vowels not triggering ''i''-affection.
* "butter" <
* "he/she steps (conjunct)" < <
Rounding of vowels by labiovelars
In Primitive Irish, ''*a'' and ''*i'' were rounded to ''o'' and ''u'' respectively when preceded by Celtic labiovelars and or a consonant cluster containing them. The rounding of ''*i'' also required the following consonant to be palatalised. This rounding occurred after i-affection as "prays" (< ) faced rounding even though the rounded vowel was originally an ''*e''.
Since "buys" (< ) faced no rounding even though its stressed vowel was originally an ''*i'', the rounding may also have taken place after a-affection as well,
but Schrijver does not find the evidence for that to be reliable.
Examples of this rounding process include:
* "wounds, kills" <
* "pious" <
* "cauldron" <
* "worm" <
* "of a tree" < (the nominative singular is secondary)
* "portion" <
Original ''*a'' preceded by a labiovelar consonant and followed by ''*n'' and an originally voiceless stop was rounded and then broken into Old Irish .
* "was wounded" <
* "fifty" <
Compensatory lengthening before fricatives
After a-affection occurred in Primitive Irish, dental and velar fricatives were dropped when immediately preceding a
sonorant
In phonetics and phonology, a sonorant or resonant is a speech sound that is produced with continuous, non-turbulent airflow in the vocal tract; these are the manners of articulation that are most often voiced in the world's languages. Vowels a ...
consonant, but transformed the preceding vowel into a long vowel or a diphthong. This development affected both stressed and unstressed syllables.
Proto-Celtic long vowels and diphthongs
Proto-Celtic long vowels and diphthongs develop in stressed syllables as follows:
:
The Old Irish diphthongs , , stem from earlier sequences of short vowels separated by *, e.g. "druid" < "tree-knower".
Most instances of and in nonarchaic Old Irish are due to compensatory lengthening of short vowels before lost consonants or to the merging of two short vowels in
hiatus
Hiatus may refer to:
* Hiatus (anatomy), a natural fissure in a structure
* Hiatus (stratigraphy), a discontinuity in the age of strata in stratigraphy
*''Hiatus'', a genus of picture-winged flies with sole member species '' Hiatus fulvipes''
* G ...
: 'hundred' < Proto-Celtic (cf.
Welsh
Welsh may refer to:
Related to Wales
* Welsh, of or about Wales
* Welsh language, spoken in Wales
* Welsh people, an ethnic group native to Wales
Places
* Welsh, Arkansas, U.S.
* Welsh, Louisiana, U.S.
* Welsh, Ohio, U.S.
* Welsh Basin, during t ...
) < PIE .
Changes to Proto-Celtic consonants
Overview
See
Proto-Celtic
Proto-Celtic, or Common Celtic, is the hypothetical ancestral proto-language of all known Celtic languages, and a descendant of Proto-Indo-European. It is not attested in writing but has been partly Linguistic reconstruction, reconstructed throu ...
for various changes that occurred in all the Celtic languages, but these are the most important:
* PIE > Proto-Celtic (but PIE > ).
* Loss of aspiration in .
* Loss of . Initially and intervocalically it was simply deleted; elsewhere, it variously became , , etc.
From Proto-Celtic to Old Irish, the most important changes are these:
* Lenition and palatalisation, multiplying the entire set of consonants by 4. See
#History for more details.
* Loss of most final consonants. See
#Syncope in detail.
* Proto-Celtic is lenited to , which then disappears between vowels. In general, Old Irish when not word-initial stems from earlier geminate (often still written as such, especially in archaic sources).
* Proto-Celtic remain in Ogam Irish ( "son" (gen. sg.)) but become simple in Old Irish. Occasionally, they leave their mark by rounding the following vowel.
* Proto-Celtic is lost early on between vowels, followed by early hiatus resolution. In some cases, combines with a preceding vowel to form a diphthong: "living, alive" < < < .
Other instances of become , which still remains in Ogam Irish. By Old Irish times, this becomes initially (e.g. "man" < , "lordship" < ), lenited after lenited voiced sounds (e.g. "bull" < , "widow" < ), after lenited (lenited "sister" < ), and is lost otherwise (e.g. "two" < , unlenited "sister" < ).
* Proto-Celtic becomes after a consonant, much as in Latin. The vowel often survives before a lost final vowel, partly indicating the nature of the final vowel as a result of vowel affection: "heart" (nom. gen. dat.) < < < PIE (e.g. gen. ). After this, is lost everywhere (after palatalising a preceding consonant).
Basic outcomes and consonant mutation
In the onsets of stressed syllables, Proto-Celtic stops, ''*m'', and ''*s'' were preserved. On the other hand, ''*y'' and were always lost. But in other situations, inherited consonants often
mutated
In biology, a mutation is an alteration in the nucleic acid sequence of the genome of an organism, virus, or extrachromosomal DNA. Viral genomes contain either DNA or RNA. Mutations result from errors during DNA replication, DNA or viral rep ...
into different consonants entirely. The two major mutations are lenition and nasalization. These mutations not only operated between word boundaries (as a synchronic grammatical process well-known in
Insular Celtic languages
Insular Celtic languages are the group of Celtic languages spoken in Brittany, Great Britain, Ireland, and the Isle of Man. All surviving Celtic languages are in the Insular group, including Breton, which is spoken on continental Europe in Br ...
) but also word-internally.
Lenition
When
lenition
In linguistics, lenition is a sound change that alters consonants, making them "weaker" in some way. The word ''lenition'' itself means "softening" or "weakening" (from Latin 'weak'). Lenition can happen both synchronically (within a language ...
applied,
stop consonant
In phonetics, a plosive, also known as an occlusive or simply a stop, is a pulmonic consonant in which the vocal tract is blocked so that all airflow ceases.
The occlusion may be made with the tongue tip or blade (, ), tongue body (, ), lip ...
s and /m/ became
fricative
A fricative is a consonant produced by forcing air through a narrow channel made by placing two articulators close together. These may be the lower lip against the upper teeth, in the case of ; the back of the tongue against the soft palate in ...
s. Lenition applied to a consonant when it was either between two vowels, or in syllable codas immediately after a vowel. The lenition mutations did not all arise in one wave of sound change; instead, there were three phases of lenition.
# The first wave of lenitions was that of voiced stops and /m/, which can even be posited at the Proto-Celtic level.
# The second wave of lenition was that of the coronal
sonorant
In phonetics and phonology, a sonorant or resonant is a speech sound that is produced with continuous, non-turbulent airflow in the vocal tract; these are the manners of articulation that are most often voiced in the world's languages. Vowels a ...
s (''*l'', ''*n'', and ''*r'') and ''*s'', which can be traced to at least the Insular Celtic level, since
Welsh also mutates coronal sonorants.
#* Unlike the lenition of stops, the "lenited" outcomes are original and the "unlenited" outcomes come from the
fortition
In articulatory phonetics, fortition, also known as strengthening, is a consonantal change that increases the degree of stricture. It is the opposite of the more common lenition. For example, a fricative or an approximant may become a stop (i ...
of the "lenited" sonorants.
#* Lenition of /s/ to /h/, while being another mutation of Insular Celtic date grammaticized in Goidelic, failed to be grammaticized in the
Brittonic languages
The Brittonic languages (also Brythonic or British Celtic; ; ; and ) form one of the two branches of the Insular Celtic languages; the other is Goidelic. It comprises the extant languages Breton, Cornish, and Welsh. The name ''Brythonic'' ...
.
# The last of the lenitions was that of voiceless stops. Given that Brittonic lenitions of these stops produced voiced stops, instead of the Goidelic voiceless fricatives, this lenition can only be dated to early
Primitive Irish
Primitive Irish or Archaic Irish (), also called Proto-Goidelic, is the oldest known form of the Goidelic languages, and the ancestor of all languages within this family.
This phase of the language is known only from fragments, mostly persona ...
or a proto-stage immediately before it.
Nasalization
On the other hand, nasalization of a consonant was triggered by following a
nasal consonant
In phonetics, a nasal, also called a nasal occlusive or nasal stop in contrast with an oral stop or nasalized consonant, is an occlusive consonant produced with a lowered velum, allowing air to escape freely through the nose. The vast majo ...
.
* Voiceless stops became voiced stops with the trigger nasal lost.
* In front of voiced stops, both the stop and nasal coexisted in earlier Old Irish but the nasal came to absorb the stop in later Irish.
* ''*w'' uniquely turned into a voiced labial fricative when nasalized.
* Other sonorants and ''*s'' surface, after nasalization, with the same outcomes as if unlenited.
This mutation gave rise to the eclipsis mutation in modern Irish.
Table of basic consonant outcomes
Below is a table of basic Old Irish reflexes of Proto-Celtic consonants, including unmutated and mutated outcomes.
Initial clusters
Old Irish preserves, intact, most initial clusters unlike many other Indo-European languages.
Preserved initial clusters:
* , e.g. "swimming", "marrow", "stream", "shadow, reflection", "he scratches (out)", "misery (?)".
* , e.g. "blood", "fame", "nut".
* , e.g. "sun", "clear", "customary".
* , e.g. "heavy', "garment", "jealousy, passion".
* , e.g. "he climbs", "he cleaves".
* , e.g. "land", "milch".
* , e.g. "belly", "flower".
Modified initial clusters:
* > , e.g. "lordship" < , "heather" < .
* / > (lenited ), e.g. "sister" (lenited ) < < PIE .
* > , e.g. "heel" < < "to stand"
** But also irregularly > , e.g. "I go" < < post-IE .
* lose the .
* PIE > Proto-Celtic > , e.g. "woman" (gen. sg.) < < PIE , an extremely archaic noun form.
[Originally a neuter proterokinetic noun of the form (nom. sg.), (gen. sg.). The original PIE nominative is still preserved in poetic or legal Old Irish "woman" (still neuter) < Proto-Celtic < PIE . The normal Old Irish nominative is (feminine) < Proto-Celtic < + normal feminine *-ā. No other IE language preserves the original neuter gender.]
Palatalization
The palatalized consonants arose in multiple stages.
In theories of palatalization, the front vowels are Proto-Celtic ''e'', ''ē'', ''i'' and ''ī''.
First palatalization
The first palatalization affected single consonants and sequences of a nasal consonant followed by a
homorganic
In phonetics, a homorganic consonant (from Latin and ) is a consonant sound that is articulated in the same place of articulation as another. For example, , and are homorganic consonants of one another since they share the bilabial place of ...
voiced stop. The palatalization depended on not only the vowel after the consonant, but also the vowel before the consonant. The following Proto-Celtic vowel setups were eligible for the first palatalization:
* Any consonant followed by ''i'' or ''ī'', with two main exceptions:
** If the vowel before the consonant is ''ā'' and the sequence after is not ''-iy-''.
** If the consonant is not coronal and the vowel before it is a stressed rounded vowel.
* A consonant entirely surrounded by any of the following vowels: ''e'', ''ē'', ''i'', ''ī''.
The first palatalization must have occurred before ''a''-affection, because otherwise the presence of palatalization of the genitive singular of ''ā''-stems (ending in ''*-iyās'' > ''*-iyāh'' > ''*-eyāh'' > ''-e'') would be dependent on root shape, yet only nigh-inevitable palatalization is actually attested in such forms.
Demonstrations of the first palatalization include:
Second palatalization
After the first palatalization, another palatalization ensued. Final-syllable Primitive Irish front vowels, after merging into a "palatal schwa", forced the palatalization of any consonants preceding them except the consonant cluster ''cht'' , which could never be palatalized. Greene labels this stage the second palatalization, while McCone treats this as a substage of the first palatalization.
Third palatalization
The third palatalization entailed any front vowel in a second or fourth syllable of a Primitive Irish word causing the palatalization of the preceding consonants. Like with the final-syllable palatalization, these front vowels were generally assumed to merge into a palatalizing schwa before causing palatalization.
The following Primitive Irish vowels merged into the palatalizing schwa in second or fourth non-final syllables:
* Front vowels ''*e'', ''*ē'', ''*i'' and ''*ī''
* ''*u'' before a palatalized consonant
* ''*ō'' and ''*a'' before a palatalized ''*s'', via an intermediate raising to ''*u''
Other vowels were reduced to non-palatalizing schwas. After syncope regularly removed these vowels, the palatalization (or lack thereof) tended to spread across the resulting consonant cluster.
However, if syncope results in a
sonorant
In phonetics and phonology, a sonorant or resonant is a speech sound that is produced with continuous, non-turbulent airflow in the vocal tract; these are the manners of articulation that are most often voiced in the world's languages. Vowels a ...
becoming surrounded by a consonant before it and a consonant after it, the effects of the third palatalization (or lack thereof) are often overridden by a special set of sound laws, presumed to be caused by the stranded sonorant assuming the role of syllable nucleus until
epenthesis
In phonology, epenthesis (; Greek ) means the addition of one or more sounds to a word, especially in the first syllable ('' prothesis''), the last syllable ('' paragoge''), or between two syllabic sounds in a word. The opposite process in whi ...
occurs before the sonorant.
Dissimilatory deletion of lenited consonants
Lenited fricatives and straddling the boundary between a stressed syllable and an unstressed one tend to disappear if there is a
homorganic consonant
In phonetics, a homorganic consonant (from Latin and ) is a consonant sound that is articulated in the same place of articulation as another. For example, , and are homorganic consonants of one another since they share the bilabial place of ...
near the end of the next syllable. If a non-front vowel comes into contact with a front vowel after it due to this deletion, the two vowels fuse into a diphthong like or . Otherwise a hiatus between the two vowels may be formed instead.
For the purposes of this sound law, is treated as if homorganic with ''s'', due to its general origin in lenitions of Proto-Celtic ''*s''.
Some examples of this sound law are given below:
* , "-teen" < ''*deǣg'' < ''*dexǣg'' < ''*dekank'' < ''*dekam-kʷe'' "and 10" ( deleted before )
* "lend!" < ''*oeðʲ'' < ''*oðeθʲ'' < ''*odete'' < ''*udete'' ( deleted before )
* "company" < ''*koimbiθʲext'' < ''*koṽʲimbiθʲext'' < ''*kom-ambi-tixtā'' (lenited ''m'' deleted before non-leniting ''m'')
* "protection" < ''*foisaṽ'' < ''*fohissaṽ'' < ''*uɸo-sistamus'' (lenited ''s'' deleted before another ''s'')
* "I taught" < ''*-rochechan'' < ''*-ɸro-kekana'' ( deleted before another )
* "I will sustain (prototonic)" < ''*folilussū'' < ''*uɸo-liluxsū'' ( deleted before another )
This deletion and diphthong formation happened before syncope.
As a demonstration, ended up syncopating its etymon's third syllable instead of the usual second. This can be explained by the first and second syllables fusing into one syllable due to dissimilatory deletion, making the etymon's third syllable the second syllable at the time of syncope.
Intervocalic clusters
Many intervocalic clusters are reduced, becoming either a geminate consonant or a simple consonant with
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 previous vowel. During the Old Irish period, geminates are reduced to simple consonants, occurring earliest when adjacent to a consonant. By the end of the Old Irish period, written are repurposed to indicate the non-lenited sounds when occurring after a vowel and not before a consonant.
Cluster reduction involving :
* > unlenited (normally written ). Note that PCelt , > > but > like : "hundred" < PCelt (cf.
Welsh
Welsh may refer to:
Related to Wales
* Welsh, of or about Wales
* Welsh language, spoken in Wales
* Welsh people, an ethnic group native to Wales
Places
* Welsh, Arkansas, U.S.
* Welsh, Louisiana, U.S.
* Welsh, Ohio, U.S.
* Welsh Basin, during t ...
) < PIE ; "way" < (vs.
Breton
Breton most often refers to:
*anything associated with Brittany, and generally
**Breton people
**Breton language, a Southwestern Brittonic Celtic language of the Indo-European language family, spoken in Brittany
** Breton (horse), a breed
**Gale ...
); , "he reaches" < (vs. Bret "must, owe"); "luck" (vs. Bret "fate").
* > unlenited with
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 a preceding vowel; > > similarly to : "swan" < PCelt < PIE (vs. Dutch "goose").
Cluster reduction involving :
* Medial > : "I am" < PIE .
* Medially, > (but > , > ).
* > , > (but after an unstressed syllable), > : "nest" < PIE .
Lenited stops generally disappear before
sonorant
In phonetics and phonology, a sonorant or resonant is a speech sound that is produced with continuous, non-turbulent airflow in the vocal tract; these are the manners of articulation that are most often voiced in the world's languages. Vowels a ...
s , with
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. Many examples occur in reduplicated preterites or words with consonant-final prefixes (such as ):
* "I have purchased" < *-xexr < PCelt *-kikra;
* "he heard" < < PCelt ;
* "number" < ;
* "assembly" < (cf. Old Welsh ).
However, , , survive: "he perforates" < PCelt ; "goat" < PCelt (cf. Welsh ); "shame" < PCelt (cf. Welsh ).
Any /h/ that ends up in an intervocalic consonant cluster for any reason triggers the devoicing of adjacent consonants in the cluster.
* > ''*æmbihoweθ'' > ''*imbhoi'' > "turns around"
* > ''*dīhlondīh'' > ''*dīhlndīh'' > "denies"
Reduction of
Sequences of in Primitive Irish are reduced to simple ''*-ss-'' if the vowel preceding the sequence is unstressed.
* > > > > (3rd-person singular s-preterite relative suffix)
* > > "relating, telling"
* > > > "is" (relative)
''*w''
Proto-Celtic ''*w'' had a complex series of outcomes in Old Irish.
* Word-initially, ''*w'' simply underwent
fortition
In articulatory phonetics, fortition, also known as strengthening, is a consonantal change that increases the degree of stricture. It is the opposite of the more common lenition. For example, a fricative or an approximant may become a stop (i ...
to ''f''. For instance, became "man".
* Immediately after some consonants, ''*w'' became /v/, spelled ''b''. After other consonants, it was deleted. Kortlandt and McCone disagree on which conditions governed transformation into ''b'' and deletion. Kortlandt believes that ''b'' appeared when a voiced lenited consonant preceded the ''*w'', and if ''*w'' came after consonants that were either unlenited or voiceless it was deleted.
Meanwhile, McCone instead believes that ''*w'' was deleted syllable-initially while ''*w'' was transformed into ''b'' when the ''*w'' is separated from a consonant immediately before it by a pre-Irish syllable boundary.
** Examples of transformation of ''*w'' to ''b'':
*** > "widow"
*** > "possession"
** Examples of deletion include:
*** > "high"
*** > "four"
*** > "sister"
* ''*w'' was lost between two unstressed vowels.
** > "battles"
** "alive" in unstressed position > "surviving"
* Intervocalically after a stressed vowel, ''*w'' persisted for longer until early Old Irish, even outlasting many deleted final syllables and syncopated vowels.
** ''*w'' was affected by Greene's second and third palatalisations, which turned it into . If this new came into contact with a preceding vowel, a diphthong ending in ''i'' was formed.
*** > > "sheep"
*** > > > "nine"
*** > > > "youth"
** Unpalatalised ''*w'' formed u-diphthongs with preceding stressed vowels.
*** > > > > "living, alive"
MacNeill's law
MacNeill's law refers to a sound law before and during the Old Irish period causing the loss of lenition of ''n'' and ''l'' in final unstressed syllables even though they are etymologically expected to be lenited in that position. Newly word-final ''n'' and ''l'' became unlenited ''nn'' and ''ll'' when the unstressed syllables containing them began in ''r'', ''n'', ''l'', , or .
A vowel between the trigger consonant and the affected ''l'' or ''n'' must also be present for the law to apply.
However, MacNeill's law often failed to apply if this vowel had been inserted by
anaptyxis
In phonology, epenthesis (; Greek ) means the addition of one or more sounds to a word, especially in the first syllable ('' prothesis''), the last syllable (''paragoge''), or between two syllabic sounds in a word. The opposite process in which ...
in the first place instead of coming from an earlier Proto-Celtic vowel.
Destruction of final syllables
Proto-Celtic final syllables were often reduced or deleted by Old Irish times.
Raising of unstressed ''-es-''
Unstressed Proto-Celtic ''-es-'' became ''-is-'' early on if immediately followed by a vowel. The resulting ''-is-'' triggers i-affection on preceding stressed syllables as it evolved into ''*-ih-'' and then ''*-iy-'' in Primitive Irish before either remaining as ''-i'' or undergoing a-affection to ''-e'' by Old Irish. This raising of ''*-es-'' occurred before the early deletion of final ''*-i''.
McCone lists the following examples of this raising:
* In second-person singular forms of verbs:
** "you (sg.) bear" > > > Old Irish , conjunct
* In the declension of neuter s-stems:
** "heavens" > > > > > Old Irish
** "heaven" (dative singular) > > > > > > Old Irish
Deletion of final ''*-i''
The absolute-conjunct distinction in Old Irish non-prefixed verbs is generally explained via the
apocope
In phonology, apocope () is the omission (elision) or loss of a sound or sounds at the end of a word. While it most commonly refers to the loss of a final vowel, it can also describe the deletion of final consonants or even entire syllables.
...
of final ''*-i'' in multiple Indo-European primary person-number endings that ended in ''*-i''. This normally happens in the conjunct forms, while in the absolute forms the apocope was blocked due to a succeeding enclitic element.
Contrast:
* > "carries" (absolute form without apocope)
* > > > > (conjunct form with apocope)
The identification of the enclitic that was used to create Old Irish's absolute verb forms has been subject to controversy. At first,
Warren Cowgill
Warren Crawford Cowgill ( ; December 19, 1929 – June 20, 1985) was an American linguist. He was a professor of linguistics at Yale University and the Encyclopædia Britannica's authority on Indo-European linguistics. Two separate Indo-Europea ...
and
Frederik Kortlandt
Frederik Herman Henri "Frits" Kortlandt (born 19 June 1946) is a Dutch former professor of descriptive and comparative linguistics at Leiden University in the Netherlands. He writes on Baltic and Slavic languages, the Indo-European languages in g ...
supposed that the protective enclitic was a particle derived from "is". The current mainstream explanation, pioneered by
Peter Schrijver
Peter Schrijver (; born 1963) is a Dutch linguist. He is a professor of Celtic languages at Utrecht University and a researcher of ancient Indo-European linguistics. He worked previously at Leiden University and the Ludwig Maximilian University ...
in the 1990s, identifies this particle as derived from "beyond", cognate to
Latin
Latin ( or ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally spoken by the Latins (Italic tribe), Latins in Latium (now known as Lazio), the lower Tiber area aroun ...
"and". Kim McCone on the other hand refuses to identify any specific particle responsible.
The environment of final ''i''-deletion is also controversial. McCone believes that all final ''*-i'' was lost by default, while Schrijver limits the apocope to just after ''*t'', ''*s'' and also ''*k''.
Final-syllable syncope between coronal continuants
After the lenition of post-vocalic consonants in unstressed syllables and the apocope of ''-i'', an early Primitive Irish syncope occurred to vowels between two dental fricatives or two rhotics in final unstressed syllables preceded by another unstressed syllable.
For dental fricatives, the result of their collision due to the syncope was originally but would then become due to a later voicing in the same environment as the syncope.
On the other hand, collision of two rhotics over this syncope would result in unlenited rhotic ''rr''. Unlike the main early Irish syncope, this syncope could ''never'' palatalise the resulting consonant produced by the collision of involved continuants, no matter what vowel was between them. Instances of this syncope include:
* > > > "is brought/given" (prototonic)
* > ' > ' > "(s)he prays"
* > ' > ' > "runs" (when two or more prefixes come between the stressed syllable of a derived verb and the verb root)
General final-syllable reductions in Primitive Irish
McCone envisions the evolution of final syllables across Primitive Irish into Old Irish as follows.
Proto-Celtic unstressed long vowels were shortened unless protected by a following
Primitive Irish
Primitive Irish or Archaic Irish (), also called Proto-Goidelic, is the oldest known form of the Goidelic languages, and the ancestor of all languages within this family.
This phase of the language is known only from fragments, mostly persona ...
final ''*-h'', whether that ''*-h'' came from a final ''-s'' (as in several nominal inflectional endings) or ''-ti'' (as in 3rd-person singular present forms of verbs). These shortened long vowels included the feminine ''ā''-stem nominative singular ending ''*-ā'' and the masculine and neuter ''o''-stem ending ''*-ī''.
Then, absolutely word-final ''-h'', vowels, and nasals caused initial mutations if possible, possibly by resegmentation onto the following word. Any remaining final-syllable short vowels, ''-h'', and nasals after this stage are deleted, while remaining final long vowels (which were subsequently shortened in Old Irish) remained. It is also apparent in Ogham inscriptions that final-syllable Proto-Celtic ''*o'' had become ''*a'' by Primitive Irish before its loss.
In the following table, the
cover symbol
Linguists use a variety of symbols to represent not just single sounds, but certain particular classes of sounds. They are usually capital letters. This article lists those "cover symbols".
Consonants
Vowels
Capitalized vowels are commonly used ...
''C'' refers to any consonant.
Anaptyxis before final sonorants
After the general final-syllable deletion processes, newly word-final consonant clusters ending in sonorant consonants like liquids and nasals in early Irish that were not simplified with compensatory lengthening gained a
schwa between the sonorant and the rest of the cluster. The schwa was often rendered with rounded vowel letters like ''o'' or ''u'' in early texts if next to a labial consonant.
For instance:
* > ' > ' > "plough"
* > ' > ' > "word"
* > ' > ' > "world"
* > ' > ' > "wish, desire"
Voicing of obstruents in unstressed syllables
Voiceless obstruents, including voiceless stops and voiceless fricatives, were often voiced word-initially and word-finally in unstressed syllables. Each type of voiceless obstruent however had different triggers for them being voiced. These voicings occurred around AD 700.
These voicings are collectively labelled McCone's law by David Stifter after their main formulator Kim McCone.
Dental obstruent voicing
Dental obstruents were voiced in word-initial and word-final unstressed syllables, in addition to between two unstressed syllables. This wave of voicing is also believed to underlie the voicing of ''t-'' to ''d-'' in proclitics.
* > "has been swallowed"
* > "denial"
* varied with "fulfils" (conjunct)
Voicing of ''f'' to
Happening along with the voicing of dental obstruents was the voicing of ''f'' to , spelled ''b''. The voicing of ''f'' has been believed to occur in near-identical environments to the voicing of dentals. Schrijver and McCone think the voicing of ''f'' could also happen word-finally in stressed syllables as well, but Stifter is not confident in the evidence.
* > > > "excellence" (but Stifter thinks it may have spread from its use as a conjunction)
* > varying with "your (pl.)"
Voicing of
Palatalised voiceless velar fricatives became their voiced counterparts word-finally and between unstressed vowels.
* > "madmen" (nominative singular )
* > "prosperity"
This voicing of palatalised velar fricatives created paradigmatic alternations in noun declension where final unpalatalised voiceless velar fricatives alternated with palatalised voiced velar fricatives. Occasionally, nouns originally ending in non-palatal in their paradigms had those unpalatalised voiced velar fricatives analogically devoiced to , for instance in < < "house".
Loss of intervocalic ''-s-''
Intervocalic single Proto-Celtic ''*-s-'' was lenited to ''-h-'' and then lost in the following manners:
* Usually the ''-h-'' is lost entirely, creating a hiatus where it once was. For instance, "to stay (somewhere)" became "to stay the night", a hiatus verb.
* After an ''*i'' or an original diphthong ''*ai'' or ''*oi'', the ''-h-'' became a glide ''-y-'' before its loss. Qiu gives > "houses" as an example. Earlier, McCone gives "seer" < (literally "old-seer") as a demonstration of this.
Changes to vowels surrounding former intervocalic ''-s-'' or glides
Vowels surrounding a former intervocalic ''-s-'', a glide ''*w'' or ''*y'', or both underwent special changes by Old Irish.
In unstressed syllables, such vowels generally fused into /e/.
* "has been" (perfect prototonic) <
* "seer" < (literally "old-seer")
* (1pl. relative ending) <
* "bear" (2sg. subjunctive) <
Changes to proclitics
Proclitic
In morphology and syntax, a clitic ( , backformed from Greek "leaning" or "enclitic"Crystal, David. ''A First Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics''. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1980. Print.) is a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a w ...
s that precede a stressed syllable undergo special sound changes during the Old Irish period.
Initial consonants
Initial ''s'' was deleted in proclitics.
* > "the" (masculine nominative singular)
* "likeliness" (dative singular) became when used as a preposition or conjunction in pretonic position.
Initial ''t'' in pretonic position was voiced to ''d-''.
* (a verb-forming prefix) became in pretonic position.
* > "your (sg.), thy"
Vowels
Long vowels merged with their corresponding short vowels in proclitics.
* > "to, for"
* > "each, every" (proclitic counterpart of "everyone", which retained the long vowel)
This was followed by ''o'' merging with ''u'', with the resulting vowel spelled with both ''u'' and ''o'' in Old Irish.
* > "to, for"
* "now" > (dummy preverb)
* > > (a verb-forming prefix in deuterotonic verbs)
* > (verbal augmentation prefix)
At the same time, ''e'' became ''a'' in proclitics, except for ''e'' before ''*nt'' which instead merged with ''i'' with the spelling vacillating between ''e'' and ''i''.
* > > "I am"
* > > "ex-" (in deuterotonic verbs)
* > > > "with"
* > "between"
* > "first"
Depalatalisation
Palatalisation was generally lost in proclitics.
* > "like, as"
* > "to, towards"
Examples of changes
The following are some examples of changes between
Primitive Irish
Primitive Irish or Archaic Irish (), also called Proto-Goidelic, is the oldest known form of the Goidelic languages, and the ancestor of all languages within this family.
This phase of the language is known only from fragments, mostly persona ...
and Old Irish.
:
Allomorphy
These various changes, especially syncope, produced quite complex
allomorphy
In linguistics, an allomorph is a variant phonetic form of a morpheme, or in other words, a unit of meaning that varies in sound and spelling without changing the meaning. The term ''allomorph'' describes the realization of phonological variatio ...
, because the addition of prefixes or various pre-verbal particles (
proclitic
In morphology and syntax, a clitic ( , backformed from Greek "leaning" or "enclitic"Crystal, David. ''A First Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics''. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1980. Print.) is a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a w ...
s) in Proto-Celtic changed the syllable containing the stress: According to the Celtic variant of
Wackernagel's law
In morphology and syntax, a clitic ( , backformed from Greek "leaning" or "enclitic"Crystal, David. ''A First Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics''. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1980. Print.) is a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a ...
, the stress fell on the second syllable of the verbal complex, including any prefixes and clitics. By the Old Irish period, most of this allomorphy still remained, although it was rapidly eliminated beginning in the Middle Irish period.
Among the most striking changes are in prefixed verbs with or without pre-verbal particles. With a single prefix and without a proclitic, stress falls on the verbal root, which assumes the ''deuterotonic'' ("second-stressed") form. With a prefix and also with a proclitic, stress falls on the prefix, and the verb assumes the ''prototonic'' ("first-stressed") form. Rather extreme allomorphic differences can result:
:
The following table shows how these forms might have been derived:
:
The most extreme allomorphy of all came from the third person singular of the -subjunctive because an athematic person marker was used, added directly onto the verbal stem (formed by adding directly onto the root). That led to a complex word-final cluster, which was deleted entirely. In the prototonic form (after two proclitics), the root was unstressed and thus the root vowel was also deleted, leaving only the first consonant:
:
See also
*
Old Irish
Old Irish, also called Old Gaelic (, Ogham, Ogham script: ᚌᚑᚔᚇᚓᚂᚉ; ; ; or ), is the oldest form of the Goidelic languages, Goidelic/Gaelic language for which there are extensive written texts. It was used from 600 to 900. The ...
Notes
References
{{Reflist, 30em
Old Irish
Old Irish
Old Irish, also called Old Gaelic (, Ogham, Ogham script: ᚌᚑᚔᚇᚓᚂᚉ; ; ; or ), is the oldest form of the Goidelic languages, Goidelic/Gaelic language for which there are extensive written texts. It was used from 600 to 900. The ...